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hurricane_logo.gifHurricane Festival
Eichenring, Scheeßel, Germany
Friday, 10th June to Sunday, 12th June 2005

Camping: 9th June until 13th June (with the 3 day ticket only)
Entrance: 89 euros + 5 euro waste deposit
Hurricane is a rock festival which takes place annually since 1997. The festival ground is near Scheeßel on a motorcycle speedway. The Hurricane Festival means three days of music on two separate stages. Bungy-jumping, Basaar, international food, games and a party tent is on the camping ground too. The camping grounds are close to the festival ground, which closes during the night. Breakfast stands are at the camping grounds. The distance between the train station, camping ground and festival ground are quite short - about one two kilometers. You can reach cash counters and drugstores by foot in Scheeßel. Camping grounds and parking lots are separated, you cannot park your car next to your tent. If you travel with a camping mobile or motorcycle, you will be guided to separate camping grounds.
http://www.hurricane.de


Infos

 
Getting there

Area description
Please pay attention to signs!
 
Bikers
Bikers may use the camping area for caravans and mobile homes.
 
Camping and parking
Please keep your ticket ready at the crossing to the camping area. The camping lots open Thursday 20.00 hrs and close on Monday 10.00 hrs. By separating parking and camping, we can improve the sanitary situation for all visitors substantially. Please consider that you must transport luggage. We try to keep the distances short. Between 11 PM and 8 AM the use of vehicles and barbeque is not allowed. All radios and cassette recorder should not be used after 2 AM because of noise disturbances. Generators are forbidden.

Caravans / mobile homes
are not allowed on the parking ground for cars, they will be parked on the special parking lots for caravans. please follow instructions. Have your ticket ready on approaching the Eichenring area. Parking and camping is only possible with a Hurricane ticket - You will have to show your ticket on demand! If you have to search for your ticket, you will probably cause a traffic jam.
 
Mutual camping? Travelling together!
Meet outside of Scheessel and travel together or in convoy.
 
Parking
Parking: Please follow the marshalls, otherwise you will cause a tailback (traffic jam)
 
Please travel by train
We recommend using a rail ticket with its advantages: discounts for early booking, for groups, weekend tickets and regional offers like the Niedersachsen ticket. You will probably avoid a traffic jam that way. Train schedule Hamburg – Bremen (http://www.hurricane.de/info/zugfahrplan_hamburg_bremen.pdf) (via Scheeßel) PDF file

Traffic jams!
To avoid this, please use car sharing or the car pooling service of our web site.
 
Wheelchair users
Wheelchair users may use the camping area for caravans and mobile homes.


Camping
  
Bikers
Bikers may use the camping area for caravans and mobile homes and park their vehicle next to their tent.

Camping and parking
Please keep your ticket ready at the crossing to the camping area. The camping lots open Thursday 20.00 hrs and close on Monday 10.00 hrs. By separating parking and camping, we can improve the sanitary situation for all visitors substantially. Please consider that you must transport luggage. We try to keep the distances short. After 11 PM barbeque is not allowed. And after 2 AM all radios and cassette recorder should not be used because of noise disturbances. Mobile energy generators are forbidden.

Caravans / mobile homes
There are separate parking lots for caravans and mobile homes. These lots do not have any power supply, generators are not allowed. Cars and tents cannot be parked with caravans, please follow the instructions of the stewards.
 
Fire / environment protection / garbage
The entire area occupied by the festival is in a sensitive natural zone.
Each festival visitor gets a garbage bag and a chip (value 5 euro - already paid with with the ticket purchase) at the entrance to the camping ground. When returning the filled garbage bag and the chip, you get your money back.
Garbage
Each camper gets a garbage bag and a chip at the entrance. With the delivery of the filled garbage bags and the chip you will receive your 5 euro deposit. Thanks for helping!

Mutual camping? Travelling together!
If you want to camp in groups, we advise to meet outside of Scheeßel and to travel together. Please have your tickets ready (like passport control) to avoid delays. Searching for tickets in your luggage causes delay. Please follow the instructions of the stewards, and you will be directed to parking and camping lots.
Wheelchair users
Wheelchair users may use the camping area for caravans and mobile homes.
 
 
Festival area 
  
Animals
...are not allowed on the festival and camping grounds!
 
Children
We urgently advise not to bring any children under 8 years of age to the festival. Small children may not cope with the strains of a rock festival. Children between the age of 8 and 14 need to buy a ticket and will only have access when accompanied by a legal guardian. There are not any ticket discounts for children. Obviously youth guidance and safety regulations are valid on festival and camping grounds.
 
Glass bottles / food and drinks
Glass or plastic bottles and cans (tins) are not allowed on the festival ground. "Tetrapacks" up to 1.5 litres are allowed on the festival ground. Tap water is available for free. Glass bottles aren't allowed on the camping site. There were too many injuries through broken glass. Please use tins / cans and plastic bottles
 
Sound / photo / video
Professional audio- and videorecording equipment are not allowed on the festival ground. Audio and video recording are not allowed and any abuse will be prosecuted.
 
 
Miscellaneous 
  
Bank facilities / cash dispensers
In Scheessel you will find two bank facilities/cash dispensers (Sparkasse and Volksbank)
Sparkasse Scheeßel, An der Sparkasse 1
Volksbank Scheeßel, Harburger Str. 4
Hotels, pensions and guest houses
In Scheessel and vicinity you will find hotels, pensions and guest houses at www.marktplatz-scheessel.de
 
Lost and found office
Lost and found office is inside at the left entrance

Medical orderly
Medical service is available inside the left entrance
 
Pharmacy
You will find two pharmacies in Rotenburg which will provide service:
Saturday: Mühlen Apotheke, Große Str. 4, Rotenburg
Tel.: 04261-2904
Sunday: Löwen Apotheke, Große Str. 45, Rotenburg
Tel.: 04261-4591

Phone, info- and meeting point
Inside the left entrance you will find telephone, meeting and information points.
 
 
Tickets
A festival ticket costs 89.00 euros and includes free access to the camping lot (we do not rent any camping gear) and free parking. There is a deposit of 5 euro per ticket on garbage bags which will be refunded by return of the garbage bag and the deposit-chip when leaving the festival. Tickets can be ordered via the Hurricane-website.




Bands

Confirmed per 22nd April 2005:


Athlete

athlete.gifwww.athlete.mu



joel pott :guitar and vocals
tim wanstall :keyboards and vocals
carey willets :bass and vocals
steve roberts :drums and vocals
From South London, Deptford


Audioslave

audioslave.gifwww.audioslavemusic.com



In the spirit of the supergroups of the past, two of the most important bands of the nineties have pooled their talents to create a new band: AUDIOSLAVE. On November 19th, Epic Records will release AUDIOSLAVEs self-titled debut album featuring former lead singer/guitarist of Soundgarden, Chris Cornell (Vocals) and Rage Against The Machine’s Tim Commerford (Bass), Tom Morello (Guitar), and Brad Wilk (Drums). AUDIOSLAVE was recorded in Los Angeles at Oceanway Studios with producer Rick Rubin.
Chris Cornell formed Soundgarden in 1985 and over the course of 12 years the group established themselves as one of the most influential rock bands of the nineties selling, over 20 million records worldwide. David Fricke writes in Rolling Stone, "On their ’94 master blast, Superunknown, Soundgarden blew a big, black hole through the burnt-boogie angst of heavy Muzak, managing to sound both fried and alive in the fine thunder-and-color tradition of late-period Led Zeppelin."

As Soundgarden continued to release critically acclaimed and platinum-selling albums, the music of Rage Against The Machine was bringing a fierce and uncompromising meld of punk-inspired hard rock and politically-charged rap to the mainstream charts. With the release of their self-titled debut in 1992 the face of rock music began to change. "On the strength of the album," wrote Timothy White in Billboard, "they must be viewed as one of the most original and virtuosic new rock bands in the nation...Rage Against The Machine generates the most beautifully articulated torrent of hardcore bedlam that one could imagine. And the hopes invested in these humming murals of urban din are equally visionary." Rage Against The Machine went on to sell 15 million records worldwide.

AUDIOSLAVE contains 14 tracks (see attached tracklisting) including their first single and video "Cochise." The video for "Cochise" will be directed by Mark Romanek. The 14 tracks on AUDIOSLAVE are the result of the band’s early time spent in their Los Angeles rehearsal space writing and jamming. During this writing and recording process, rough demos from the album were leaked to the internet. Obviously, these tracks are not representative of the final album as they were rehearsal demos. The members of AUDIOSLAVE look forward to bringing their completed album to the masses this fall.


Beatsteaks

beatsteaks.gifwww.beatsteaks.com



Hello there Ladies and Gentlemen! We´ve got our new record ready! And it answers to the name of SMACK SMASH! Having been busy writing new songs throughout the summer, while yall were out relaxing by the quarry pond, we embarked on our studio tour of Berlin on October 3 and recorded 12 songs in four different studios. Our producer, MOSES SCHNEIDER, forced us to record LIVE, which led to our getting to know our instruments in painfully new ways… and believe it or not – in terms and sound and material, SMACK SMASH makes no secret of how it was created: on your marks, amps on, record! The highlight of the operation was a gig at Berlins Knaack Club, where the recordings were completed under the watchful eyes of invited friends and family. Subsequently, PETER SCHMIDT (BlackPete) faced the difficult task of putting things back onto the rails again in the mix, if you catch our drift...

Esteemed Ladies and Gentlemen – we can hardly stop ourselves from rolling on the floor for sheer delight in our new oeuvre! SMACK SMASH reflects the best that we´ve got to offer at present. Here´s a thumbnail description: following a brief opening, namely BIG ATTACK, the album gets right down to business with VISION, proving that we’ve dismally failed in hiding our love of loud guitar riffs. AINT COMPLAINING and HAND IN HAND are tests to assess just how close our good friend ROCK can get to our good friend POP... HELLO JOE is directed at Joe Strummer, while we owe LOYAL TO NONE to Bernd, something that hasn´t happened since SCHLECHT on our first album. I DONT CARE AS LONG AS YOU SING elaborates on the vibe which we introduced with HAND IN HAND, and were dead proud to be able to sound like this. Naturally, EVERYTHING is about love, and WHATS COMING OVER YOU takes even us to the verge of tears. Good job were all back pissing in the same boat with MY REVELATION, setting our good friend ROCK afloat again.

... The longer we listen to SMACK SMASH, the more we approach delusions of grandeur, and that, as we all know, is just about self-confident enough. With our small promotional tour at the end of January behind us, you will be able to find us on the euro-pallets of this world again in late March, following the release of SMACK SMASH...


Boysetsfire

boysetsfire.gifwww.boysetsfire.com
www.hardplace.de/boysetsfire


Nathan Gray – Vocals
Chad Istvan – Guitar
Robert Ehrenbrand- Bass
Josh Latshaw – Guitar
Matt Krupanski – Drums

What happens when a grassroots band like BOYSETSFIRE starts to get national attention? They do what they’ve always done: they play fiery live shows, strive to write the best songs possible and most important of all, they keep speaking their minds. The Live For Today EP contains the Delaware quintet’s first new music in more than two years and is the follow-up to their breakthrough 2000 album After the Eulogy. That album sold more than 50,000 copies, got BOYSETSFIRE pegged in Rolling Stone as a band to watch and led to their touring as part of both the Warped Tour and Europe’s Deconstruction Tour last summer.

Included on the six-song Live For Today EP are three new studio tracks: “Release The Dogs,” “Bathory’s Sainthood” and “Curtain Call” (the first two are a taste of the band’s forthcoming album Tomorrow Come Today – “Curtain Call” is available only on Live For Today). Another new song, “Handful of Redemption,” is included in an exclusive live version. Live For Today is rounded out with live versions of two standout After the Eulogy tracks; the title song and “Rookie.” Recorded before a packed house on July 19, 2002, at Club Krome in South Amboy, NJ, the live tracks clearly show the bond between BOYSETSFIRE and their audience. “At our shows we try to clearly communicate our beliefs to the audience,” comments drummer Matt Krupanski. “Playing live is cathartic for us; a spiritual experience,” notes guitarist Josh Latshaw.

In fact the band has barely stopped playing over the past year, between their own headline gigs and sets at Warped and Deconstruction. “Sometimes I’m amazed at how people can see those tours and listen to so much punk/pop at once,” laughs Latshaw. “But Warped was awesome and the European crowds at Deconstruction were great. We got along with all the other bands, got to play for a half-hour and then spent the day hanging out. So anybody who complains about those tours should be shot.” “I think we shine a little better onstage than we do in the recorded material,” adds lead singer Nathan Gray, “so we thought it was a good time to give people a little taste of the live show and maybe keep them satisfied until the album comes out. ‘Rookie’ and ‘Eulogy’ are two songs that always work really well live; they’re songs that everyone can get into and sing along with. And ‘Handful of Redemption’ is actually one of the most poppy songs on the new album, so we thought it would be fun to let people hear that one.”

Yet a quick listen to Live For Today shows BOYSETSFIRE can have it both ways. They began life as a punk band and they’ve built on their hardcore roots without ever leaving them behind. But they’ve never been afraid of a real melody or a well thought out arrangement and Gray can take his place as one of the post-hardcore scene’s most expressive, instantly recognizable singers. New producer Dave Fortman came in with an appreciation for what the band had done in the past. “He really kicked our butts, but only because he wanted the best songs to come out,” says Latshaw. Live For Today’s lead-off track, “Release The Dogs,” won’t be anybody’s idea of a sellout. With furious guitar-slinging by Latshaw and Chad Istvan, “Release The Dogs” is the band’s response to the wave of militarism that followed the 9/11 attacks. Never afraid of making a statement, BOYSETSFIRE have produced some of the first real dissent heard in rock since then.

“I feel that the true form of patriotism is protest,” says Gray. “And I personally feel that most people are scared out of their minds to say anything about it for fear of getting labelled as un-American. What inspired that song is that after September 11 it seemed there were a lot of conservatives—and even people who considered themselves liberals—who were waiting for something like that to happen so they could pass certain laws that would erode the basic freedoms in this country. We’ve played that song at some of our shows and it seemed that a lot of people had just been waiting to hear an outcry about that.” “Bathory’s Sainthood” is equally hard-hitting. “We’ve caught some flak because the words ‘bastard’ and ‘messiah’ are in there right next to each other,” admits Gray. “But it’s not meant to be lashing out at God, only at people who think they’re God. It’s funny, we never think about how controversial a song is going to be until somebody comes up to us and says, ‘Holy shit! Did you really say that?’”


Brendan Benson

aerzte.gifwww.brendanbenson.com



Brendan Benson is a band. Sure, it’s also the man’s name. But as he wrote the songs that would become his dazzling new CD THE ALTERNATIVE TO LOVE, he never stopped imagining the two guitarists trading licks, the back-up singer adding harmonies, the bass drum booming through his spine -- never mind that he does all that stuff himself. Brendan Benson is a one-man band, but, he says, "band is the operative word."  He's neither a singer-songwriter (though of course his music is impeccably constructed and observed) nor a simple pop musician (though every note he's ever played is catchy as all get-out), and even "cult artist" doesn't cut it anymore, given the way fans, critics and DJs in both the U.S. and U.K. embraced 2002's Lapalco. Three years later, you could even say THE ALTERNATIVE TO LOVE is long-awaited. And from the revved-up guitar chug of “Spit It Out” to the Wall of Sound swoon of “The Pledge” to the haunted piano tones of “Biggest Fan,” it doesn't disappoint, offering up a dozen shimmering examples of dynamic rock' n' roll that's both joyous and bittersweet –as you might expect from someone whose publishing company is called Glad Sad Music.

Benson flies solo in the studio so he can work whenever inspiration hits, with "collaborators" who are always on the same creative wavelength. "It's childish," he admits. "It's hard for me to hand the sticks over, or sit there and listen to someone else and not just say, 'do it like this.'" But that's the way the Michigan/Louisiana native has always recorded, going back to his teenage years overdubbing one track at a time on a regular home stereo. Those bedroom sessions, and some recording in L.A. with producer Ethan Johns and Jellyfish's Jason Falkner, eventually evolved into Benson's mythological debut One Mississippi. But when that 1996 Virgin release (reissued by StarTime in 2003) left him as another critical success story on the verge of getting dropped, he retreated to Detroit's Belle Isle neighbourhood, using what was left of his second-album advance to fill a big old house with vintage recording equipment and well-used instruments. It was there he made Lapalco, which the Times of London dubbed "an album of such radiant beauty and wrist-slashing introspection that it puts all other pretenders to the Beatles/Beach Boys mantle firmly in their place." Entertainment Weekly, NME, Details and Mojo ("some records are so perfect they make you worry") also fell in love with it.

THE ALTERNATIVE TO LOVE feels like the precisely calibrated offspring of its predecessors – brighter than Lapalco, not quite as big a sugar-rush as Mississippi. "It's a nice kind of blend of the two," Benson says. Despite his professed allergy to singer-songwriter syndrome, Benson has been doing more acoustic gigs the past few years, which played into the song writing process. And while the songs are mostly about love, heartbreak, and connection, the context isn't always romance – Bensons also draws on harder life experience, like being abandoned by his father, and the death of his grandfather who raised him. "A lot of times it might sound like I'm singing about a girl, but it just might be about someone or something entirely different," he says.

If Lapalco brought to mind certain dark-night-of-the-soul records from the late '60s and early '70s, Benson has found himself listening to things like Calexico, the Cars and the Pretenders lately. But if you were to hit him with that old standby of a question, "what are your influences?" he could give a unique answer. "A lot of times I'll record or write a song because I've got a new amp, or someone’s left a guitar at my house, or I’ve acquired a new microphone. I just have a real fascination with the sound of things." He even traded in some of the stuff that figured on Lapalco -- THE ALTERNATIVE TO LOVE was recorded on relatively newer stuff, digital as well as analogue. "I don’t have a lot of conceits when it comes to recording music like, 'no computers were used in the making of this record,'" he says. “Computers make things easier. But drums and acoustic guitars, I believe, sound notably better on tape." The record's intricate sonic imprint also stems from Tchad Blake's mixes. The producer/engineer, best known for his work with Mitchell Froom (Los Lobos, Latin Playboys, Elvis Costello, Crowded House) is a longtime fave of Benson's. "Oh my god, my hero," he says. "We just talked a few times on the phone. I said, do whatever you do, make it sound good! And he did. Some tracks, he kind of produced retroactively. When I heard them with headphones on I was laughing uncontrollably. I was so pleased."

THE ALTERNATIVE TO LOVE is a headphone record among other things, from the Spectoresque bombast of "The Pledge" to the mind-bending harmony and call/responses of the title track. Other highlights include the amiably wobbly "Cold Hands Warm Heart," which is already a live favourite, and the album-ender "Between Us," which lays the raw emotion of a woman's post break-up answering machine message over an almost-psychedelic anthem. Then there's the deceptively sing-song "What I'm Looking For," which offers up a worldview – about art, life and love -- in just 18 words: Well I don't know what I'm looking for but I know that I just wanna look some more. "That's pretty much it," Benson says. "That's me." Which is not to say he lacks focus. If anything, he's too focused -- exclusively on rock' n' roll. When he's not doing his own stuff he's producing other bands (including V2 label mates Blanche and the next record by Cincinnati garage-rockers the Greenhornes) and he and Motown compadre Jack White are working on a duo record." I could happily spend the rest of my days doing something with music," Benson says. "If I'm not working on music, anxiety sets in. Maybe it's not so healthy-to stay locked away in a studio–you've gotta live a life to write a song. But in Letters to a Young Poet, Rilke said if you were in jail, cut off from the world, with nothing but a view of the sky from a small window, you'd still have your memories to write about. I love that."


Broken Social Scene

"You Forgot It in People" a pop record designed to remind us that music still has to be recreated. This album flows like a compilation of sounds for the wounded.




Die Ärzte

aerzte.gifwww.bademeister.com



Die Ärzte Biography 2004
1982: The Berlin based punk band Soilent Grün turns into Die Ärzte: Farin Urlaub (guit.), Bela B. (drums) und Sahnie (bass).
1983: Berlin Indie-label Vielklang to put out the first Die Ärzte releases
1984: The Band wins the local music competition and starts a huge series of live-gigs, signs a deal with CBS and releases their debut »Debil«.
1986: Bassist Sahnie to quit the band, being replaced by The Incredible Hagen.
1987: Die Ärzte to become the most-censored band of the Western world: 3 songs, 2 albums, a concert poster and coinciding ticket are being labelled as youth-threatening items.
1988: At the end of a ground-breaking 3-months-long tour being topped by a legendary show on the island of Sylt, the band decides to call it a day. The resulting triple Live-album enters number one of the German sales charts.
1993: The German music trade-magazine Musikmarkt prints the following sensational advertisement: »Die Ärzte (Best Band in the World) looking for record company.« The label Metronome gets the deal and releases »Die Bestie in Menschengestalt«. The bass is now played by Rodrigo Gonzalez, who used to be in the German trio The Rainbirds and also shared a project with Bela called Depp Jones.
1994: Extensive touring which includes 5 sold out nights in a row at Hamburgs legendary Club Docks
1996: The rhythm groups dream come true: Die Ärzte get to support the KISS reunion tour as their Special Guest. At the famous Rock am Ring Festival they´re playing in front of 100.000 people.
1998: Die Ärzte are founding their own record company »Hot Action Records«. The 14th album is called »13« and the first single breaks all sales records. The matching music clip features original Tomb Raider´s Lara Croft.
2000: The new album »Runter mit den Spendierhosen, Unsichtbarer!« to be released in a fluffy, polar-blue plush bag. The following tour attracts about 300.000 fans to go see their 3-hours-shows in venues all over Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Their DVD »Killer«, by accident, wins an Innovation award.
2001: The official band bio, as big and as heavy as a tombstone, hits the bookstores and finds itself on no. 13 of the book charts published on a weekly basis by Der Spiegel. Die Ärzte are embarking for a reading tour, taking place in movie theatres in G/S/A.
2002: By MTV-invitation Die Ärzte are recording a six–hour-long unplugged session in a Hamburg High School assembly hall, featuring the entire school orchestra and choir.
2003: The 29th of September has seen the release of the double album »Geräusch«. Ticket sales for the December-tour have been increasing throughout the summer to being absolutely sold-out.
2004: After a # 1 Album, a # 1 first single »Unrockbar« and two top 15 singles (»Dinge von denen« and »Nichts in der Welt«) Die Ärzte are currently playing an extensive Tour through sold out Arenas and Stadiums all over Germany, Austria, Switzerland and even Italy. The release of the fourth single »Deine Schuld« is scheduled for July 12th and the first Live double DVD release »Die Ärzte im Konzert - Die Band, die sie Pferd nannten« is expected for the 23rd of August.


Flogging Molly

floggingmolly.gifwww.floggingmolly.com
www.floggingmolly.de


Cruise down Fairfax Boulevard in Los Angeles, and if you're lucky, you'll spot a small Irish watering hole named Molly Malone's. It's a neighborhood pub smack dab in the middle of a big city. Guinness and Harp are on tap, the patrons are friendly (but sometimes dangerous), and overall, the spot is downright welcoming and cozy. In other words, it's the perfect birthplace for Flogging Molly. "It's a lot to be said for alcohol, I suppose," says Flogging Molly singer-guitarist Dave King. "We found each other in a bar and did what we did for the love of the music. Who would have known that in three years we'd have albums out and be on the Warped Tour?"

Blame it on the luck of the Irish. The transplanted Dubliner met many members of FM — which include accordion, fiddle, tin whistle and mandolin players - while bending an elbow. Luckily, the band's thirst for whipping a uniquely unclassifiable style of music is just as fierce. Flogging Molly eventually took its name from a long-running residency at Molly Malone's, where the band's live shows flogged the place into worship. Since 1997, King and Co. have crafted a self-produced live disc, their proper 2000 debut SWAGGER and just-released DRUNKEN LULLABIES (the latter of the two engineered by Steve Albini). Cross breeding traditional Irish influences and heavy-hearted storytelling with brazen punk rock, feel free to call Flogging Molly what you'd like — "Agro-Celt," "jig-punk," "Celtic 'core— they've heard it all before.

"I'm inspired by bands like The Dubliners and The Pogues," says King, who checked out a Pogues' reunion show on a 2001 holiday trip back to Ireland. "And then we do what we do with it. We're taking a love of Irish music and we're making our own thing. We are our own little dot on the map. What we have is really special." King's telling tales of freedom, struggle and his parents (his father passed when he was 10 years old) have been known to move fans to tears. But mainly, the music's kinetic energy winds up the crowds who turn out for the ballistic shows. Often mentioned in the same sentence as contemporaries Stiff Little Fingers and the Dropkick Murphys, Flogging Molly was recently seen blowing away just about everybody else on the 2001 Warped Tour. And are always up for a sweaty club appearance

"The only way I can think to describe the atmosphere at a show is that of a football game — and when I say football, I mean soccer game — in the sense that there's a camaraderie between the band and the crowd," says King. "We become one. There are no barriers at the show. It's just one big fucking party. When people leave our show, I want them to go, 'I had a fucking great time there.' That's very important to us." King's been in the States for a little over a decade, and has put some time in other bands — namely Fastway, the band formed by ex-Motorhead guitarist "Fast Eddie" Clarke. But the roots of Flogging Molly can be traced as far back as his childhood. "Both my mother and father were great singers and we had a lot of parties in our house, called 'hoolies,’" says King. "We'd all sit around in a circle and people would be jamming, playing music and singing. It was great. Sometimes when I look at the songs that I write now, I'm really searching to get back there. I'm searching for that spark of inspiration." When recording, the band works to retain that same liveliness and musical freedom. King builds the basic structure of a song and the band comes together to blow it out. It moves quickly in the studio — SWAGGER and DRUNKEN LULLABIES were recorded in just a few days.

"We record albums in the same amount of time that are mere belches for other bands," says King. "We don't want to over-do our albums, because we want to give the songs room for improvement. The album shouldn't be the end-all, be-all of what we're saying. There should always be room for spontaneity. The album is just a blueprint of what the band should be about and then you take it from there. It's all about the live show." But the blueprint that King is working from is just as time-tested as his Gaelic tradition. Songs on DRUNKEN LULLABIES like "May the Living Be Dead In Our Wake," "If I Ever Leave This World Alive" and "What's Left of the Flag?" are gut-wrenching tales of struggle and triumph, and some of the most honest personal accounts you'll hear in punk music today.

"I only sing about things that effect me. And fortunately, or unfortunately, things that effect me effect everybody. I sing about life," says King. "I've had the good times and I've had the bad times. Everybody has. And whether you're 40 years of age or 14 years of age, this music can touch you in some way. Anybody who has a beating heart in their chest can relate to what I'm singing."


Kettcar

kettcar.gif





La Vela Puerca

vela_puerca.gif





Madsen

madsen.gif





Millencolin

millencollin.gifwww.millencolin.com



Fredrik Larzon - Drums,
Erik Ohlsson – Guitar,
Mathias Färm - Guitar,
Nikola Sarcevic- Bass, Vocals

Every now and then a band sneaks in under the radar, stealthily picking up fans while the masses sleep. Then, suddenly, they show up as a big, fat blip on your radar, swooping in low with guns blazing, cutting a scorched swath across the rock and roll landscape. Meet MILLENCOLIN, a quartet of disarmingly affable Swedes about to blow your face off with Home From Home, their spanking new 13-track rock attack. Home From Home finds the band, (whose back catalog has already Sound Scanned over 300,000 units in the States, latest album “Pennybridge Pioneers” sold Gold in Australia and totally the band has sold impressive 1,5 million albums worldwide), sidelining the sonic doctrine on which they cut their teeth in favor of a powerful melodic assault; giving way to…More rock. More rock! laughs guitarist Erik.

Now, in a world where bands suffer for swapping styles, this might seem brave. But MILLENCOLIN, they've only souped up their sound. No forsaken roots here. They've simply progressed as a band. You need to get influences from wherever, [then] pick up melodies or song structures, says guitarist, Erik. If you listen [repeatedly] to the same music as you're playing, the music will stop there. Pennybridge Pioneers took that step even further. On Home From Home, we're really starting to find our own sound.

Est. 1992 in Örebro, Sweden by Erik, formerly of Charles Hårfager, bassist/vocalist Nikola and Seigmenn drummer Mathias, MILLENCOLIN's Pennywise, NOFX, Operation Ivy and Bad Religion-influenced sonic doctrine would quickly make them a favorite in their country. In early 1993, they would record two ten-song demos, Goofy and Melack, adding Kung Pung drummer Larzon in between; Mathias being a better guitarist than drummer. Melack would arouse interest from Swedish indie label Burning Heart Records. In short order, the band had a deal. Three full-lengths, Tiny Tunes, later renamed Same Old Tunes (due to threat of a lawsuit from Time Warner Company who claimed the artwork and title being a rip off of their Looney Tunes-trademark, which is also was…), Life On A Plate, and For Monkeys would emerge between 1994 and 1997. Until this point, it's all perfectly congruent with any band's story, except MILLENCOLIN had attained a level of success in Sweden which had them feeling adrift in a trendy sea, watching the original intent of the band bubble under. They would begin to tour outside of Sweden, reaching other parts of Europe, Japan, Australia and the U.S., which helped rekindle the flame.

Right about here is where they began to reexamine their sound, looking beyond punk and ska in search of something seamless and identifiably MILLENCOLIN. A step toward this was Pennybridge Pioneers, an album which Epitaph prez/Bad Religion guitarist Brett Gurewitz, having already shepherded the U.S. release of Life On A Plate, would request the pleasure of producing. A more straightforward rock album, Pennybridge Pioneers was recorded at the punk recording bastion, Westbeach Studios. We really worshipped everything that came out of Epitaph and was recorded at Westbeach, Erik confesses. Going into Westbeach and with Brett was one of our biggest dreams, ever.

After touring Pennybridge, MILLENCOLIN had reached the critical stage where, after four albums, it was time to make a sort of debutante disc introducing a band with a fully formed sonic identity. To that end, MILLENCOLIN enlisted producer Lou Giordano, known for his work with such bands as Samiam, Goo Goo Dolls. Live, Lemonheads and Sugar. Giordano would fly to Sweden to begin work on what would become Home From Home. Giordano and MILLENCOLIN settled into Mathias' Sound Lab Studios for a pre-production session, whipping a batch of seventeen songs into shape. The next week, band and producer relocated to Little Big Room in Haninge, where the batch was whittled down to thirteen tracks which found MILLENCOLIN evolved beyond their influences and having made their statement.

The archetypal opener, a three-minute fist-pumping, yeah-yeah anthem called Man or Mouse, will become a live standard, as it's also a perfect show starter. Fingers Crossed follows it up with a galloping punk rhythm that says hello to Life On A Plate Millencolin before bounding into two stellar examples of Millencolin circa now: Black Eye, with it's Samiam-style ringing/droning guitars and sweet Sugar-y vocal harmonies, and Montego, which recalls the anthemic quality of Man or Mouse, slightly subdued, but no less powerful. Latin-tinged guitars propel Punk Rock Rebel. Kemp, the first song written for the album, is another blistering melodic assault with a nice, juicy hook. Botanic Mistress, is bouncy punk rock bliss. Happiness For Dogs picks up the pace before Battery Check stops for mid-tempo reassessment of life.

On the homestretch, the relationship analysis Fuel to the Flame re-ignites things, the melodic political rocker Afghan puts the cards on the table, Greener Grass is bounding introspection, and Home From Home sings up the Swedish punk scene with Nikola and Bombshell Rocks' Mårthen Cedergran doing lead vocal quid pro quo. It's a new and exhilarating ride for the band and its fans, and one that forecasts a long tenure for MILLENCOLIN, as they've achieved standout status by hitting upon a cohesive sound and delivering it with aplomb. What's most important, says Erik, is it feels like we've created our own sound, but still haven't given up our roots; never jumped on a new trend and completely changed sound all of a sudden. We've just grown into this sound from over the years and it feels really honest. This sincerity of sound that will further endear Millencolin to its rapidly growing fan base, which will get to experience Home From Home live this Spring, as the band prepares to beef up their already-impressive lifetime gig total (650-plus), with another world tour. Millencolin is justly proud…and elated. It feels good, says Erik. Home From Home comes from the expression 'home away from home', meaning simply that our band and being on tour has grown in to being our second family.




Moneybrother

moneybrother.gifwww.moneybrother.net



Moneybrother walked straight in to peoples hearts with his gold selling, Grammy awarded, striking debut album “Blood Panic”in 2003. Back again to fill us with his smooth soul, rock, punk and pop songs, this time around with even stronger tunes on his conscience: The new album “To Die Alone” is scheduled for release on the 2nd of March (Scandinavia), and on the 7th of March (Gas) and april (France, Spain, Italy, Be-Ne-Lux). The first saplings stretch towards the light, the girls get rosy cheeks and spring gets into the trees, hearts and your pants – the second Moneybrother album “To Die Alone” doesn’t suit this cheesy cliché at all. And yet spring still is an appropriate release date: Everybody’s disposed to something exciting. And now you get some great expectations, great emotions, and great gestures.

Originally of punkrock fame for his vocals in Monster, in 2003 Anders Wendin took a new direction with his solo project Moneybrother: This is where he creates his custom soul orientated blend of all the music styles he likes to listen to, making moods and details from genres like reggae, rock’n’roll or even disco subliminally swing underneath. The debut “Blood Panic“ has yet made success follow him around: From a Swedish Grammy to a sold-out German tour you’ll find enough reasons for great expectations concerning the second record. Meanwhile, the musician aims at his very own goals.

As you can hear, during the time between the two albums Moneybrother has developed an obsession of string arrangements. This has almost led him to overshooting the mark – he decided to rather withhold some of the songs though they had already been recorded. “All these components must be put together in the right way; you need so much for it to sound absolutely right. There are a few moments on this record that sound exactly how I wanted it. More often than on the last record.” The Swede obviously struggles hard to get close to his musical ideal. Thus, “To Die Alone” was meant to be more dramatic than the debut. Moneybrother had the possibility to act out for this demand in the most passionate way: In November 2004, the album was recorded in an old movie theatre that had been converted into a studio. Most of the music was being played live for the record, because in spite of all this string-swollen drama the whole thing was not supposed to end up as a stiff, symphonic piece. Alive, organic and direct, that’s what makes the soul of this album. Its content mainly deals with breaking up, loss and deep regret. It circles around the feeling when you realize that you made the wrong decisions.

In his accurate way the artist afterwards listed a line-up for each single song. He does not only intend to credit his musicians – but also to let you know what kind of instruments were being used. On top of that Wendin presents himself like a religious icon on the album’s cover artwork. That seems pretty bold, but it matches the Moneybrother universe. After all, the musician has invented the Moneybrother in order to use it both as a project’s name and as a fairy tale character: Moneybrother is supposed to be a big rock star, maybe even a sorcerer. “When on stage or recording, I want it to be very big and beautiful, even bigger and more beautiful than I really am.” No matter if the music makes you happy or sad, first of all things Moneybrother wants to move his audience. On their way to the stage, he often reminds the band of his claim that they are not just musicians. He demands them all to be romantics. And he wants them to create something beautiful and moving. Not involving complicated pomp, but real feelings. Moneybrother has a magnifying effect: Music and lyrics reflect ordinary people – but larger than life.

Copyright © 1993-2004 Burning Heart Records. All rights reserved.


New Order

neworder.gifwww.neworderonline.com



Until the death of singer Ian Curtis in 1980, Joy Division was one of Britain's most admired and promising post-punk bands. New Order built on that promise, with 1983's "Blue Monday," forging an influential alliance of new-wave and dance music. Joy Division's Velvet Underground -- derived drone and Curtis' matter-of-fact, gloomy lyrics scored significant club hits with "She's Lost Control," "Transmission," and "Love Will Tear Us Apart," a British hit single. Formed by Hook and Sumner after they saw the Sex Pistols play in Manchester on June 4,1976, the group took shape after Curtis responded to a "seeking singer" ad posted by the two at the local Virgin record store. Morris joined on drums the following year. The band, naming itself Joy Division after Nazi military prostitute compounds, released a four-song EP, Ideal for Living by year's end. In April 1978, the band generated a buzz when they performed at a Stiff Records battle of the bands. After turning down deals with Britain's RCA and Radar labels, the group recorded their first album, Unknown Pleasures, with producer Martin Hannent. They chose Manchester independent Factory Records to release the album, which was an immediate success in the U.K.

The next year saw the band's acclaim grow as they toured England and Europe. In March they returned to the studio to record their second album, Closer. Curtis, who was responsible for much of the group's dark vision, suffered from epileptic grand mal seizures -- occasionally while performing onstage. Having attempted suicide in the past, Curtis hanged himself on May 18, 1980, just before the release of Closer (Joy Division's most commercially successful album) and the group's first U.S. tour. A collection of demos, outtakes, and live performances, Still, was released in 1981. The remaining members regrouped as New Order and added Morris' girlfriend Gillian Gilbert on key-boards. Like Joy Division, New Order has eschewed publicity, with no band photos on album covers, and played low-key, unemotional concerts. The group's sound -- a brighter but still moody version of Joy Division, with Sumner's monotone yet plaintive vocals at the center -- gained it club hits with "Everything's Gone Green" (1981) and "Temptation" (1982).

"Blue Monday" (1983) was New Order's breakthrough. Released only as a 12-inch single, it matched the band's usual emotional chill to a propulsive dance track and reached #5 on the Billboard dance chart, selling over three million copies worldwide. Sessions with dance producer Arthur Baker followed, producing "Confusion" (1983), another dance-floor favourite, which hit #71. The band left Factory Records in 1985, signing with Quincy Jones' new Qwest label. Although Lowlife (1985) and Brotherhood (1986) were their first American chart albums, sales were disappointing. Substance (1987), Technique (1989), and the hit single "True Faith" (1987) turned things around, but the band members turned their backs on stardom, releasing only the British World Cup Soccer theme "World in Motion..." (1990) before unofficially parting ways to pursue solo projects.

Sumner had the greatest success, teaming with ex-Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr and Pet Shop Boy Neil Tennant on "Getting Away with It" (1990), featured on Electronic (1991). Bassist Peter Hook's solo project, Revenge, released One True Passion (#190, 1990), while Morris and Gilbert wrote British TV themes, eventually releasing an album as the Other Two. New Order re-formed in 1993, releasing Republic, followed by a successful tour of the U.S. The band members were rumored to be at odds with each other, however, by the release of a 1995 anthology. In 2000, New Order contributed the song "Brutal" to the soundtrack of the Danny Boyle film The Beach. The following year, they appeared at several west coast dates of Moby's Area: One Festival, and were set to release their first album of new material in eight years, Get Ready - Rolling Stones Magazine


Nine Inch Nails

nin.gifwww.nin.com




Nine Inch Nails was the most popular industrial group ever and was largely responsible for bringing the music to a mass audience. It isn't really accurate to call NIN a group; the only official member is singer/producer/multi-instrumentalist Trent Reznor, who always remained solely responsible for NIN's musical direction (he was, however, supported in concert by a regular backing band). Unlike the vast majority of industrial artists, Reznor wrote melodic, traditionally structured songs where lyrics were a focal point. His pop instincts not only made the harsh electronic beats of industrial music easier to digest, but also put a human face on a style that usually tried to sound as mechanical as possible. While Ministry crossed over to heavy metal audiences, NIN built up a large alternative rock fan base right around the time of Nirvana's mainstream breakthrough. As a result, Reznor became a genuine star and his notoriously dark, brooding persona and provocateur instincts made him a Jim Morrison-esque sex symbol for the '90s. The new album WITH TEETH will be released on the 2nd of May 
 

Oasis

oasis.gifwww.oasisinet.com/site.php
www.sadsong.net


Eleven years after their first gig in their native Manchester, eight years after Definitely Maybe, their first album, got a generation who had all but given up on rock and roll buying music again, five years after the media madness of the mid-nineties started to subside, there is no mystery why millions still love Oasis: honesty. The men are honest, the music is honest. We trust Oasis - always have done. We've known the Gallagher brothers were for real, ever since we heard that first album. That is why, one Saturday morning this winter, when 120,000 tickets went on sale for the bands two summer shows at Finsbury Park, London, Noel Gallagher was able to take a call from his manager by lunchtime to say that nothing had changed, that all the tickets had sold, that his band were still the biggest thing in British rock. "That´s without them hearing any of the new stuff," says Noel, shaking his head in admiration. "For all the fans knew, we could have made a reggae album."

They have not made a reggae album. What they have made is Heathen Chemistry: explosive, yes; experimental, no. It' i another, great, Oasis album; the fifth they have done in the studio and the best, says Gallagher, since their second, What is the Story Morning Glory, became the best-selling British album ever. (In 1996, Oasis sold 18 million albums.) "We have moved on a wee bit," says Noel. "But to re-invent ourselves completely we wouldd have to be contrived and we are not capable of that. I could not take on an alter ego and I know Liam could not because I would be stood behind him going “you look like a twat”. I do not think I would look good in leather trousers anyway. Our favourite bands are still The Beatles and the Sex Pistols. We do Oasis music and that is it." Honesty again. Similarly, there is nothing too deep and meaningful about the album' title. It came from a t-shirt Noel bought in Ibiza.

"I love this record," says Noel. "But I would say that wouldnt I?" With any other pop idol, of course youd share his cynicism. Coming from a man so ruthlessly self-critical as to virtually disown the band´s third album, a man who says that even their excellent last album Standing on the Shoulder of Giants, contained only three or four great songs, a man who is scathingly dismissive of the marketing hype that threatens to engulf his industry, you pay attention when he says: "Its a better collection of songs than the last two or three. It boils down to that: the songs are better. It does get more difficult. I throw more stuff away now. You can´t just write Raspberry Fields Forever."  "I dont know if Im a better songwriter," he says. "But there is something in the air around the band that breeds better songs." He is reluctant to analyse it further, but admits that Liam contributing three songs and new members Gem Archer and Andy Bell one each might well have forced him to raise his game. "Maybe it´s a competitive thing, I dont know. Keith Richards said “you dont go after the songs, the songs find you."

"The best songs," he says, "pour out of you. You sit there with a guitar and a piece of paper and a pen, get the first line right, the rest of it comes immediately." That happened to him several times last summer. "I was living in a hotel near Buckingham Palace. Warm day, fuck all on the telly, in love with my girlfriend. I wrote She is Love in ten minutes. Live Forever was like that. They´re the songs that mean something to other people. You write it, put the kettle on, come back, sing it into a tape recorder, play it back and go: `thats finished.´ Fast forward six months and theres 60,000 people in a field singing it to you. What the fucks that about?" Noel conjured up Stop Crying Your Heart Out in similar fashion. "That song found me," he says. "Its about getting up and getting on with your own life, making a better life for yourself, not trying to change destiny." Buskers be advised to learn it quickly: this track will be the Wonderwall of its time. "It has the potential to be a massive worldwide hit," says Noel matter-of-factly.

If She is Love is about Noels new girlfriend, many will assume that Force of Nature is about his ex-wife. But theyd be wrong. "Ill have to answer this a million times," he says wearily. "I wrote it for a film with Jude Law and Jonny Lee Miller a year before I got divorced and I've got the video to prove it. There you go. I´m going to bring the video to all my interviews for this album." It´s no surprise that Noel still has what it takes - but now it turns out that his brother has too. "When I heard Born on a Different Cloud," says Noel, "I didn´t think Liam had written it. I thought he was lying. But he always said, with everything has been through, if he hasn´t got it in him to write songs like that he'd be a waste of space. It was gonna come out one day." Now it has. Liam' big brother glowed with "massive relief and pride".

If it sounds like they´re getting on well, that´s because they are. The brothers have put early flights home from tours and threatening splits behind them. Oasis are settling in for the long-haul. "I've grown to love that boy so much," says Noel. "He is real. People say he plays up to his image but has always been like that: lippy, loudmouthed, funny. Now he understands that when you're working you can´t go on acting like youre sixteen when youre thirty. As soon as he started writing songs, he stopped being a pisshead." Thanks to that change, and - Noel is keen to stress - the calming influence and expert musicianship of Gem and Andy, the recording of Heathen Chemistry was sober and relaxed, unmarked by tantrums or walk-outs. The energy and attitude that have always been the bands strengths went into the music, not the myth-making, and it shows. "Were not a flash in the pan any more," says Noel, his familiar attitude showing through.

"Weve been doing this over ten years. Weve been to the top of the mountain, had a look at the view and it was beautiful. Weve been the lowest - band members leaving, drugs, drink, writs. Dont tell us what to do any more, we know what were doing. Weve been doing it. Weve been the smallest, weve been the biggest, weve been the best." And, once the world has heard Heathen Chemistry, the world will say that Oasis are the best once again.


Phoenix

phoenix.gifwww.wearephoenix.com
http://www.laut.de/wortlaut/artists/p/phoenix/index.htm


In 2000, Phoenix’s first album release, UNITED, blazed across the musical skies like a newly discovered comet. Paris, London, Dublin, New York and Detroit were all captivated, with everyone heaping praise on them, name-checking them as influences. And with good cause: great composition, great performances, great production and attention to detail, combined with the unanswerable success of the album’s singles, Too Young, Funky Squaredance and If I Ever Feel Better. Buyers and critics were unanimous in hailing a brilliant début.

For ALPHABETICAL, Phoenix’s four members – Thomas Mars, Christian Mazzalai, Laurent Brancowitz and Deck d’Arcy – closeted themselves away in their studio, determined to create a recording at once more complete and more personal than UNITED. They operated as a true collective, a symbiosis in which each member was equally responsible for the lyrics, music, performance, arrangements and production. They were adamant that, at every stage of the album’s production, they do their utmost to retain their artistic signature, even if it meant allowing certain imperfections and accidents to make it into the final mix. Speaking of which, American Tony Hoffer was brought on board to add his technical prowess to the final mixing – he was able to add a new dimension to the group’s already highly polished production.

The album opens with a bang: Everything Is Everything is the happy lovechild of a radical beat and brilliant songwriting. Phoenix have once again given birth to a mutant, drawing on a range of disparate influences to create an idiom that is both coherent and profoundly original. What can you say about a track like Run, Run, Run, a highly improbable collision between folk guitar and a pounding hip hop beat? Phoenix have the knack of flawlessly unifying the seemingly incompatible – it’s never artificial, never labored. I’m An Actor ushers in a radical change of tone: a monologue from the mouth of an actor drunk on power that progressively becomes a furious, megalomaniacal rant. Jagged guitars, off-beat rhythms, all conjure up a sense of imbalance. The atmosphere is heavy, the sense of uneasiness immediately palpable. Every break, every silence, each new element turns up the intensity of the dramatic pressure until, right at the end, the apotheosis comes in the from of a deluge of powerful chorals – a form not previously used by Phoenix – that lends the track an undeniably epic, even heroic, dimension.

ALPHABETICAL is a very complete, uncompromising work. It’s modern yet timeless, pluralist yet singular, elaborate but never labored. It is a work of nuance and subtlety that never crosses the line into affectation and superficiality; a work of remarkable diversity and coherence. Phoenix have a rare mastery of the lyric, words entwining themselves around and within, yet always at the service of the song. “We took a lot of trouble to make sure that the lyrics were honest and the emotions true, even at the risk of sometimes painful introspection. We wanted to avoid losing focus, the sort of ‘catalogue of styles’ thing. So we ended up being very selective both in choosing and arranging the tracks. We tried to free ourselves of everything artificial, preferring unmediated energy and total honesty in performance. But by the same token we wanted the work to remain supple, sophisticated and above all really unique and celebratory; when it comes down to it, the only thing that you want to happen once people have listened all the way through is for them to listen to the whole thing again!”




Queens of the Stone Age

qotsa.gifwww.qotsa.com



Josh Homme admits his ulterior motive is to get his listeners into bed, not put them to sleep. "This record's vibe is like, let's drink wine and screw," says Homme. "The idea was to have the record be like a long, slow, comfortable fuck.


Rammstein

rammstein.gifwww.rammstein.de




Christoph Schneider
Flake Lorenz
Richard Z. Kruspe-Bernstein
Till Lindemann
Paul Landers
Oliver Riedel

RAMMSTEIN: INTERNATIONAL BIOGRAPHY
“We had fun, and if there’s a different feel to this album, then that’s the reason why…” – Christoph Schneider

For RAMMSTEIN, ‘Reise, Reise’ – the Berlin band’s fourth studio outing since 1995 – is a collection of ‘firsts’: the first time the six have recorded in Spain (El Cortijo Studio, Malaga); the first time bassist Oli has sung on an album (he underpins Till’s more dramatic vocal moments); the first time Schneider has torn up the rhythm rulebook (check out ‘Keine Lust’/‘No Desire’ for Rammstein ‘shuffle’ nummer eins!), the first time the group have worked on songs they weren’t all committed to right from the start (some of which are now amongst their favourites); the first time they’ve recorded a track as in-your-face commercial as second single/ video ‘Amerika’ or as stripped-to-the-groove acoustic as ‘Los’/ ‘Let’s Go’, and – as mentioned above - the first time in a long time the recording vibe could genuinely be called relaxed. ‘Fun’ even.

So does ‘Reise, Reise’ still sound like Rammstein?
Absolutely! Many of the band’s signature motifs continue to strike a major chord – the extra widescreen production (courtesy of Jacob Hellner, who has been integral to the studio side since day one), the German vocals (with the exception of ‘Amerika’, which switches in and out of English, and ‘Moskau’, where Till gets some distinctive Russian back-up) and the ability to write songs that, in a just & fair society, would be adopted as anthems by independent states the world over. However, from the band’s point of view, ‘Reise, Reise’ (either ‘Journey, Journey’ or ‘Voyage, Voyage’, depending how literary you wish you go!) represents a move that takes them well beyond the comfort zone – voyage, voyage, indeed…

“For me, this project marks a new beginning,” says Schneider. “After the ‘Mutter’ album (2001), we found it difficult to be with each other, because our egos were causing a problem. There was a lot of tension in the way we were working together, and I guess we were using that competitive atmosphere, the aggression, to drive the creative process… “Certainly, we achieved good results that way, but for this new album we decided to do things differently; we spent a couple of months apart, and that made us realise just how much we’d accomplished over the years. So when we went into the studio this time, we made sure that the atmosphere was a lot lighter, and that we explored each other’s ideas in full. If we hadn’t done that, we would never have emerged with a song such as ‘Los’…”

NOW CONFIRMED for release on September 27 2004, ‘Reise, Reise’ – 11 tracks, nigh on 50 minutes of music - is without doubt Rammstein’s most complete set of recordings, taking the band into areas that - under the old working regime - could easily have remained unexplored. Would ‘Mutter’-era Rammstein have been quite so keen to turn off the distortion (‘Los’) or dismiss their preferred military two-step in favour of a full-tilt stomp (‘Keine Lust’)? Probably not. But now, after an extended (though fruitful) period in a black & white world, Rammstein 2004 are starting to see the grey, and having a damn good time doing it…

Says Richard: “With ‘Mutter’, there was very little flexibility involved, it was almost like we were working towards some sort of a ‘masterplan’; plus, that was a very hard record to make from an emotional point of view, because as six strong individuals we were all trying to make ourselves heard… “This time, however, we’ve done things on the recording side that we wouldn’t have in the past, including writing in the studio, something that gave us a real sense of freedom. But I honestly don’t think we could have reached the place we are now without going through the whole ‘Mutter’ experience – we survived that, and it made us all a lot stronger…”

Certainly, ‘Reise, Reise’ (the album) shows a band prepared to ditch the ‘masterplan’ in favour of an approach that, by previous standards, could almost be described as ‘reckless’. Since the release of their ‘Herzeleid’ debut back in 1995, the Rammstein reputation has been hammered out on words such as ‘disciplined’ & ‘precise’; here was an act whose power seemed to stem from their symmetry, their ability to work in unison, to deliver the well-aimed (musical) blow… then deliver it again. Naturally, that quality continues to have its place, but ‘Reise, Reise’ – tracked over a six-week period & mixed in Stockholm by Stefan Glaumann, reprising his role on ‘Mutter’ – is a ‘rock‘n’roll’ album at heart, packed with raw power (‘Stein Um Stein’, etc.) and raw emotion (‘Ohne Dich’, ‘Amore’, etc.) in equal part; a record that moves like a well-oiled machine, but with a human hand very much at the controls…

From drums through to vocals and all points inbetween, Rammstein have created a body of work that not only frees up their collective skills, but moves those skills to a higher, more spontaneous level, the whole thing supported by mandolins & accordions, choir & orchestra parts. Whether or not Till actually went to train his vocals in a local monastery, as a poker-faced Flake will tell you if you ask, must remain the subject of some debate, but there’s no denying that – with or without monkish aid – these are his finest vocal performances to date…

“If that’s true,” says Till, “It’s because of the music I was given, which is full of great melodies. The way it normally works is that I take the instrumentals out of the studio, turn up the volume, then start searching for the right words. About 80 per cent of the time I have a pen & paper with me, so I can jot down ideas and file them away on the computer until it’s time to go back in the studio, which is when the approval process starts… On one track, I came up with 24 different sets of lyrics before the band said they were happy - they’re very critical! Getting the final OK is a bit like putting a car through an inspection!” WITH FIRST single, ‘Mein Teil’, however, it’s likely that the approval committee didn’t need too long to make up its mind; a No. 2 hit in both Germany & Spain, this is perfect Rammstein lyrical fare - the true tale of Armin Meiwes, a 42-year-old computer expert from Rotenburg, Central Germany who advertised on the internet for someone to eat and eventually found a willing ‘dinner companion’ in 43-year-old Berliner, Bernd Juergen Brandes. Not only did Meiwes end up devouring a good part of Brandes, but the ‘good part’ he started with was the engineer’s penis, which the pair of them flambéed in red wine & garlic then shared out 50/50!

Needless to say, this whole high-profile affair caused a great deal of controversy, especially in Germany, although - if truth be told - it isn’t without its darkly comic side; indeed, one of the possible treatments for the ‘Mein Teil’ video saw Till decked out as cannibal chief preparing to make a meal of the unfortunate Flake, and then of course there’s the title of the track itself – ‘Mein Teil’ or ‘My Tool’… What sort of ‘tool’?! You decide for yourself, but chances are that red wine & garlic are likely to be involved… With the ‘cannibal clip’ having been passed over for practical reasons, it was decided that – in keeping with the feel of the new album – the video should follow a less scripted path, giving the band members a chance to interpret the music in their own particular ways; for Richard, this meant wrestling against himself, for Flake dancing in under-size ballet shows, for Paul & Oli an extended trip to the make-up room and for Schneider an equally long trip plus a temporary period (occasionally in public) as Armin Meiwes’ mother (!), and for Till a feather-strewn session with an accommodating ‘angel’…

“Each band member came up with their own performance independent of the others,” explains Flake, “and it was kept a secret whilst the filming was going on, which was all done I one go, no cuts, no breaks. There was a huge black box in the middle of the soundstage in Berlin, and we just went in there one by one and did our own thing…” Overseen by Zoran Bihac, who had previously worked on the ‘Links 2 3 4’ animation back in 2001, the end result is a striking exploration of the darker side of the Rammstein psyche. By way of contrast, the video for second single ‘Amerika’ (directed by Jorn Heitmann, the man behind the ‘Ich Will’ & ‘Sonne’ clips) is an altogether more tongue-in-cheek affair, in which the members of the band can be found both round a campfire and up on the moon, providing the ideal tone for a song that successfully pairs the words ‘wunderbar’ & ‘wunderbra’ - surely a rhyme long overdue for a group who, by their own admission, don’t approach everything with too straight a face…

“There are people who think we’re incredibly funny and there are people who think we’re incredibly serious,” reflects Paul, “it’s just down to personal opinion. I suppose in that respect we’re something of a mirror – whatever views or preconceptions people have just reflect straight back on them…” FUNNY, SERIOUS or somewhere inbetween, ‘Amerika’ promises to be one of the highlights of the show when Rammstein take to the road again in early November; already, many of the dates are either sold out or being added to, with a third night at the Velodrom in Berlin the most recent extension to a tour that is set to run well into 2005.

Following a series of shows in Germany, the band will be heading further afield (to Belgium, Holland, Portugal, Spain, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Russia, Poland, Czechoslovakia & Switzerland, with more to come) accompanied by the sort of incendiary stage trappings that saw them triumphing in the ‘Best International Live Act’ category at the UK Kerrang! Awards in 2002… “But of course we haven’t been able to play the new numbers live as yet,” points out Oli, “so they’ll probably change here & there when we take them out on tour, which I know is something that happens with a band like Depeche Mode. To me, it’s a positive thing, because it means that we’ll end up with two different versions of the songs – the studio one, which we did our very best on at the time, and the live one, which will develop night by night…”

In the build-up to the tour, the Rammstein camp (collectively & individually) have been busy promoting an album that not only stands as the finest of their 10-year-plus career, but as proof positive that great things can be born out of adversity. There should have been a lot of pressure on the band as they went into 301 Studios in Stockholm to lay down the drum tracks – not all of the material was cast in stone, the money advanced for the project had already been spent and the experience of ‘Mutter’ had generally been difficult, causing plenty of late night soul-searching. In the event, however, the recording process was to prove an enjoyable one, causing an ongoing bout of confidence/camaraderie to break out in the ranks, a bit like back in the early days… “This was definitely the easiest album we’ve ever made,” concludes Paul, “and because of the three-year gap between this and our last record, it was important that we took a more experimental approach – by our standards, anyway.  “Recording this way is a bit like taking the veil off a woman – you really hope there’s a pretty face underneath!” Statuesque, shapely and 100 per cent wart & blemish free, ‘Reise, Reise’ is indeed a thing of beauty…… 
 

SKA-P

ska_p.gifwww.ska-p.com
www.ska-p.de


The most energetic Spanish live set since Mano Negra: SKA-P (from “Ska” and “escape”), six young musicians from the suburbs of Madrid, mix Ska with Punk, Hip Hop, Reggae and Polka. The band’s lyrics are radical, their attitude is anarchist, lead singer Pulpul extremely charismatic. And their fans love it. In 2002 and 2003 SKA-P have conquered Latin America, France and Italy in a storm, playing in front of over 10 000 people.Next on the list: Germany.


Slut

slut.gifwww.slut-music.de



Slut was born in 1995 - We grew up and met in Ingolstadt, apart from Rainer who spent his childhood in a small village 30km away. Amusing anecdote: his first time in a McDonald's was at the age of 17. In 1996 - we sign our first record deal with Sticksister Records. This sees the birth of our debut album "For Exercise and Amusement", recorded by Mario Thaler. The album is a kind of summary of the band's first 15-month-existence. Then we go on tour! Don Rock (singer of former German bands like "Sharon Stoned" and "Locust Fudge") comes with us and introduces us to the rock'n roll world. We drive through various countries and introduce ourselves simply by saying "Hello, we're Slut from Germany", and from there on everything happens by itself and it is great.

1997 - The band becomes closer and we hire an old castle in Westerhofen (near Ingolstadt). Together, we live and work there. We transform some of the rooms to accommodate them for our band practices and transform others into a studio. This studio is actually owned by our 'live-mixer', Holger Krywon. We affectionately call him "grandpa" because of the age difference between us.

1998 - sees the production of "Interference", in our brand new studio. Living and working in the same place allows us to analyse our work more carefully and helps us feel strongly self-sufficient and independent in our choices towards our music. Moreover having one's own bedroom only two flights of stairs away from the studio has sometimes an advantage. The members of "Pelzig", Rene's and Rainer's other band, also live with us in the castle in Westerhofen.

1999 - We go on tour as much as possible. We also take loads of pictures (one represents a circus tent in Sweden) because we want as many souvenirs as possible of the places we visit. Anecdote: we went to play in a festival in Sweden, where there was no beer at all. "Grandpa" was not happy about that! 1999 also brings Rainer and Christian to the end of their studies. Rainer is an engineer and Christian an architect. Rene and I (Gerd) still study in our free time. Matthias is finally doing his civil service in a psychiatric department.

2000 - The band has more time to devote to its music. This is when we decide to try out various things to help us in our music. We try playing different songs, anything that could contribute to our music. Hans-Christian Schmidt asks us to write two songs for his film "Crazy". This gives birth to the two songs, "Sensation" and "Welcome", the most melancholic part of our following album. "Welcome" is then released on a single album. Before we know it, we are signing a contract with Virgin. Matthias finishes his civil service, which means that each one of us can dedicate all our time to the band and our music. All that matters to us is the production of the new album. And we feel fine.

2001 - Lookbook is finished. We fly to London and Chris Blair does the mastering of the album in the abbey-road studios. And here we go: our very first journey through the press. We give hundreds of interviews, we play our songs with acoustic guitars live on radio, we appear on TV and start a long tour that takes us through Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Then summer comes and along with it the music festival period: we play almost everywhere until autumn. After a short break we start working together again on a new album, the title of which we have already chosen...

2002 - We keep on working hard and we release a 4-song EP. One of the tracks has no music, only lyrics, about our home country, which means that each of us had to sing along. a video shot on another song, "teardrops", the EP title song, shows how elegantly we can whizz in a four-seater bob trough the Innsbruck olympic ice rink. At the end: bruises, which we are proud of. We spend the summer swimming, watching football, having BBQ parties and working on the album, again in Weilheim, with Mario Thaler and Olaf Opal. We all agree on many things and decide on the album‚s name: "nothing will go wrong". Moreover we also go to Paris to shoot a video with friendly French ladies and gentlemen. The album is released in august. Obviously we are not the only ones who like it.

2003 - We tour through Germany, the Netherlands, Austria, Belgium, Denmark and Switzerland, and we do enjoy this outing. When we are not on the road, we go back to our own personal loves. For instance Christian sets a theatre play to music in the "Altes Schauspielhaus" in Stuttgart, and builds some houses. Rene paints and sets up exhibitions. He and Rainer release with Pelzig, our sister band, "drive your engine clean", their third album already. Matthias polishes up his academic career and trains for the giro d‚italia, while i spend a lot of time scribbling dubious limericks. Towards the end of the year we rent an old, or rather, spooky, school house in the Czech Republic in order to reflect on the next album.

2004 - Our parents are proud: our beloved home town has awarded us the honourable prize for the promotion of art. As kings we head for Weilheim. 

 
System of a Down

soad.gifwww.systemofadown.com
www.soadfans.de


SYSTEM OF A DOWN´S NEW RELEASE TO BE TITLED "MESMERIZE/HYPNOTIZE" Release Will Be a Two Album Set With Six Months Between In-Store Dates. Heralded by Entertainment Weekly as the Number One (of 25) "Most Anticipated Albums," System of a Down announces that their new album will be titled "Mesmerize/Hypnotize," and will be a two album set with the CDs slated for release some six months apart. Disc 1 of the set ("Mesmerize") will be in stores late first quarter 2005, while Disc 2 ("Hypnotize") is expected to see a late Summer/early Fall 2005 release date on the American Recordings/Columbia Records label. The band is currently in a Los Angeles studio doing vocals.

"There has been a great deal of upheaval, very troubling times for all of us over the past year or so," said vocalist Serj Tankian, "and that has brought forth a lot of emotional material. There´s a good amount of social commentary in the new songs, as well as songs where we deal with love, with reminiscing, relationships, politics, and funny experiences."

System of a Down (Daron Malakian, guitars; Tankian, vocals; Shavo Odadjian, bass; John Dolmayan, drums) came up with the idea of a double album out of sheer necessity. Malakian who wrote most of the new songs and is producing the album with Rick Rubin, explained, "When we started recording, we were focused on making every song the best it could be, to really give a thousand percent to every, single track. Doing a two album set never entered into our thought process. But when we looked at all the songs we had and arbitrarily tried to choose `the best´ fourteen for one album, we realized we had two album´s worth of really great songs, and that they all connected with each other. We didn´t chase this idea, it chased us."

The decision to release the two discs six months apart was made simply to give fans time to get into and really live with the music from Disc 1 before plunging into Disc 2. Both "Mesmerize/Hypnotize" discs will be completely recorded, mixed, and sequenced at the same time, before Disc 1 of the two album set is released. Malakian recently told Entertainment Weekly that the new music "is more mature," and promises "an orchestra, some obscure Middle Eastern instruments, and 'pure schizophrenia.'"

"Mesmerize/Hypnotize" will be the follow-up to the five-million-selling "Toxicity" which was released in September 2001 and debuted in the Number One position on the Billboard/Soundscan charts. Of that album, Rolling Stone wrote, " Toxicity resembles nothing else in contemporary hard rock," and the New York Times commented, "System of a Down is light years removed from the going trend in metal." "Toxicity" generated four Top 10 singles, including the #1 smash "Aerials," and was named "2001´s Best Album of the Year" by SPIN Magazine.


Wir Sind Helden

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All infos taken from www.hurricane.de

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