L.A. WEEKLY REPORTS: NOW THAT IT’S BEEN CANCELED, CAN “THAT METAL SHOW” FIND A NEW HOME?

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Matt Wake of L.A. Weekly reports:

Much like some VHS bootleg of a vintage Judas Priest concert, early on That Metal Show was something headbangers shared with their brethren over a sixer on Saturday nights. Yet a few seasons in, the VH1 Classic program — which in 2008 began beaming classic-metal heroes last heard rocking Fiero stereos into present-day TV audiences’ living rooms — had cracked the mainstream.

Entertainment Weekly and Rolling Stone gave the show positive, prominent ink. Drummer Steven Adler wore a That Metal Show T-shirt during his 2012 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction with Guns N’ Roses. True Blood hunk Joe Manganiello has professed his fandom of the show, as has Grammy-winning Americana singer-songwriter Jason Isbell.

The crossover appeal? That Metal Show hosts Eddie Trunk, Jim Florentine and Don Jamieson’s knowledge and love for heavy music makes for consistently compelling interviews, whether their guests can still fill arenas (like Rush virtuoso Geddy Lee) or their stardom has long since faded (various second-tier ’80s pop-metal acts). That Metal Show gave a breed of musicians charismatic enough to have once dominated MTV, before becoming persona non grata during the ’90s, a nationwide platform again.

“At first we didn’t know if anyone was watching or cared,” Jamieson says. “But after a few seasons we really started to hear directly from artists about how much we helped them get a new record deal because they did the show. Or they got another couple of tours out of doing the show.”

…On January 19th, Trunk announced on his website that VH1 Classic had decided to stop making new That Metal Show episodes. The news was particularly surprising to fans, since VH1 Classic often seems like it could be rechristened That Metal Show Classic, with reruns of the show’s more than 125 episodes in heavy rotation, particularly on weekends.

But Trunk saw this coming as long ago as mid-2015, when they were wrapping their 14th season, “We started to hear various things from the network around that time, about the possibility of us moving to another channel within their network,” he says. “A lot of different things. And many of the key executives that were involved with That Metal Show slowly started to leave or were replaced, so we knew that obviously was a bad sign. But we also knew we were pretty much the anchor for the entire channel. We had become the big fish in the small pond.”

Whereas VH1 proper is a big, mainstream, well-funded channel, VH1 Classic is the much less bountifully financed little sister. Other VH1 Classic programming is mostly licensed from other sources. In the long run, Trunk says, the channel didn’t seem willing to continue investing in original programming. “It became this problem where people wanted more of it and they didn’t have money to make more of it,” he explains. “So it was very push-pull.”

Still, Trunk is grateful for their eight-year run on VH1 Classic, during which TMS was able to have a studio audience, take good care of guests, feature multicamera work and an increasingly rad set — all things that cost money. (VH1 Classic did not respond to L.A. Weekly’s request for comment.)

That Metal Show’s hosts all live in New Jersey, and the first four seasons were shot in New York, from 2008 to 2010. Trunk has been an East Coast rock-radio fixture since 1983 and Florentine and Jamieson are stand-up comics based there. The three became friends after Florentine and Jamieson would listen to Trunk’s radio show in New York after their comedy gigs and were psyched to hear someone else out there still jamming to Saxon.

…In 2010, That Metal Show moved to L.A., where many veteran hard-rock and metal artists reside, shooting at a Glendale studio and later at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City. This had a huge impact on the show, says Trunk, who had a hand in booking the majority of their guests. “It was so much easier to say to somebody, ‘Hey, can you come to Sony?’ or ‘Come to Glendale … we’ll send a car for you.’ It made it so easy we literally could pick and choose.” They’d shoot two episodes a day, putting an entire season in the can after about two weeks.

For the TMS hosts, who came of age in storied East Coast metal clubs like L’Amour, the move gave them a chance to tap into the West Coast’s temples of boom. “There are a ton of metalheads in the Los Angeles area who lived those days on the Sunset Strip,” Florentine says. “Those people still live out there and we started taping the show there and those people started coming out of the woodwork.” Lines to be a part of their L.A. studio audiences wrapped around the block, Jamieson says.

TMS began to book bigger and bigger guests. Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich. Black Sabbath riff-meister Tony Iommi. AC/DC screamer Brian Johnson. The biggest coup was a 2011 field interview with Axl Rose, the GNR singer’s first complete on-camera TV interview in a decade or more, filmed at a Chinese Democracy tour stop in Miami.

“There was some miscommunication as to why we were there and he apparently wasn’t aware that we were there to interview him,” Jamieson says with a laugh. “So we waited many hours to get the interview done. I think we started at like 5 in the morning. But to get that first Axl Rose [TV] interview in all those years was really important for us.”

…The show will be missed not just by its fans but also by rock and metal musicians. Guitarist John 5, who works with Rob Zombie as well as maintaining a solo instrumental career, has appeared on TMS numerous times. He’s also a huge fan of the show. “There was nothing — nothing — on TV at the time like a rock or metal show, which was like something [from] the past,” he says, speaking by phone from his home in the Sherwood Forest section of Northridge. “It is really sad the show is not going to be on VH1 Classic anymore, because that was our whole outlet. That’s what educated us on what’s happening.” When John 5 meets fans at signings, many of them say they first discovered his music through his That Metal Show appearances.

But there’s hope that That Metal Show hasn’t seen its final days. Producer Jeff Baumgardner cut a deal with VH1 Classic allowing him to take the brand and shop for a new home. “And that’s where we are now,” Jamieson explains. “Obviously you have a lot more options these days. You don’t have to go the traditional television route. Streaming services — Netflix, Amazon Prime — are creating amazing programming. So those are obvious choices for us. But at the same time our audience is basically us — guys who are middle-aged and still watch more conventional television — so we’re looking at both routes.” Trunk would love to end up on Showtime or HBO, where guests would be free to tell their crazy musician war-stories unedited. Florentine sees cable channel AXS, which already features music programming and is readily available, as a good fit.

…So what is it exactly about this loud music that moves its biggest proponent? “For me, it sounds crazy, but I’ll get like goose bumps when I hear a great guitar riff or a great vocal or just a great energy in the music,” Trunk says. “I’m 51 years old and I started in music industry right out of high school at 18, and I still get that same charge, whether it’s old or new music, when it really connects and moves me. I have a lot of friends that used to be into this music like I am and now they’re totally different. ‘Oh I don’t listen to that stuff anymore.’ It’s almost dismissive. I can’t understand that. To me that’s incomprehensible because once it’s in you, it’s in you. And to me it never left.”

Read the entire feature at L.A. Weekly.

source: laweekly.com

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FASTER PUSSYCAT ANNOUNCES 2016 TOUR DATES TO CELEBRATE 30TH ANNIVERSARY

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Faster Pussycat has just announced a spring tour which will begin in Las Vegas on April 9th at Count’s Vamp’d and wind down on May 15th at AVA Amphitheater in Tucson, AZ.

The first portion of the tour will take the band to the east coast and back, including performing on the main stage at the M3 Festival in Columbia, MD on April 30th along with Tesla, Night Ranger, Quiet Riot, Queensryche and many more.

Confirmed dates are as follows:

4/9 – Vamp’d – Las Vegas, NV
4/10 – TBA – Phoenix, AZ
4/12 – The Rock Box – San Antonio, TX
4/13 – The Rail Club – Dallas, TX –
4/14- Houston Fountains Concert Series – Houston, TX
4/15 – Oklahoma City Limits – Oklahoma City, OK
4/16 – The Hideaway – Jackson, MS
4/17 – 120 Music Hall – Atlanta, GA
4/18 – Basement East – Nashville, TN
4/20 – The Orchards – Chambersburg, PA
4/21 – Sports Page – Lebanon, PA
4/22 – Palace Theater – Stafford, CT
4/23 – Revolution – Amityville, NY
4/24 – Dingbatz – Clifton NJ
4/26 – 1150 OAK – Cranston, RI
4/27 – Blackthorne 51 – Queens, NY
4/28 – Bullshooters – Philadelphia, PA
4/29 – Tally Ho Theater – Leeseburg, VA
4/30 – M3 Festival – Columbia, MD (Day)
4/30 – Hard Rock Live – Pittsburgh, PA (Night)

5/1 – The Firehouse – Richmond, IN
5/4 – O’shecky’s – Columbus, OH
5/5 – SouthPort Music Hall – Indianapolis, IN
5/6 – Tailgaters – Bolingbrook, IL –
5/7 – Phat Headz – Green Bay, WI –
5/8 – Luciana’s Rural Oaks – Ottawa, IL
5/9 – The Scene – Kansas City, MO
5/11 – Mesa Theater – Grand Junction, CO –
5/12- Buffalo Rose, Denver CO
5/13 – TBA Albuquerque, NM
5/14 – Tucson, AZ – AVA Amphitheater

6/10 – Whisky A Go Go – West Hollywood, CA.

Along with touring, the band is currently working on a new EP.

Faster Pussycat’s current line-up is:

Taime Downe
Danny Nordahl
Xristian Simon
Chad Stewart
Ace Von Johnson

Faster Pussycat on the web:

facebook.com/fasterpbandofficial
fasterpussycat.com

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GUITARIST ULI JON ROTH SAYS HE BE RELEASING A DVD CALLED “TOKYO TAPES REVISITED”

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Ruben Mosqueda of Sleaze Roxx spoke with former Scorpions guitarist Uli Jon Roth. Excerpts from the interview appear below.

Sleaze Roxx: It was a little over a year ago when you released Scorpions Revisited which is nod to your history and your work with Scorpions. You treated the fans to not only one disc but two discs of reinterpreted Scorpions classics. How did you select which songs would make the cut for that release?

Uli Jon Roth: That was quite easy actually. I looked at the album sleeves. I looked at the albums and looked at the track listings and said “Yeah, those are the ones.” I had a selection of about 25 songs and 18-19 ended up on the album. These were my favorites — most which I had written. There were a few that were written by Rudolf (Schenker) and Klaus (Meine) with my input being me providing guitar lines.

It was unusual for me to relive my past. I see it as a reinterpretation like you said of my past. I left Scorpions when I was 24 years old. There had been a lot of water under the bridge. As you can probably imagine, I’m a much different person now. It was an interesting project for me. I was not prepared to find what I did in this project. It was enjoyable and refreshing. I must confess a lot of the songs that we recorded, I wasn’t completely satisfied with how we recorded them in the ’70s. I wanted to make sure that I was happy with the new versions of the songs.

Sleaze Roxx: There’s a number of parallels between you and Michael Schenker — both former Scorpions guitarists, both went on to solo careers and both have entered a “celebration” phase of your careers where you’re embracing your musical histories.

Uli Jon Roth: [Laughs] It’s quite eerie, isn’t it? [Laughs] Michael and I have touched on this in our conversations in the past but it’s purely coincidental, of course. There are a lot of parallels. We both started off in Hanover about one month apart. We both embraced guitar playing at a very young age. We both made it out Hanover at the same time roughly. We both left the Scorpions out of our own accord. Michael actually left them twice [laughs]!

Sleaze Roxx: I imagine since you’ve been touring relentlessly behind Scorpions Revisited — you must have recorded a number of live performances, no?

Uli Jon Roth: Well, we have recorded a lot of shows but I just want to release the very best. There will be be a counterpart to Scorpions Revisited and it will be called Tokyo Tapes Revisited. It’s a DVD recording of a 2.5 hour show that I did in the same hall where we recorded Tokyo Tapes. That video looks and sounds really great. We just finished editing it in Japan last week. It will be out later this year. We originally wanted to issue another live performance that we had recorded and I wanted to issue it after the studio album but I wasn’t too happy with that and we decided against that. Then, there was talk about recording the show in Japan where Scorpions recorded Tokyo Tapes and that turned out wonderfully.

Read more at Sleaze Roxx.

Uli Jon Roth is currently on the road with guitarists Jennifer Batten and Andy Timmons (Danger Danger) on his Ultimate Guitar Experience tour, see the remaining dates below.

Mar 3: New Orleans House Of Blues, LA
Mar 4: San Antonio The Korova, TX
Mar 5: Houston Concert Pub North, TX
Mar 8: Phoenix Joe’s Gotto, AZ
Mar 9: Las Vegas Country Saloon, NV
Mar 10: Ventura Theater, CA
Mar 11: Ramona Main Stage, CA
Mar 12: Los Angeles Whisky A GoGo, CA
Mar 13: San Jose Rock Bar Theater, CA
Mar 14: Concord Vinnie’s, CA
Mar 15: Reno PB&JJs, NV
Mar 16: Redding The Dip, CA
Mar 17: Portland Dantes, OR
Mar 18: Seattle Studio Seven, WA
Mar 19: Vancouver BC Venue, BC
Mar 22: Denver Oriental Theater, CO
Mar 24: Moorehead The Garage, MN
Mar 25: Savage Neisens, MN
Mar 26: St Charles Arcade Theater, IL
Mar 27: Chicago Reggie’s, IL
Mar 28: Detroit Token Lounge, MI
Mar 29: Toronto Mod Club Theater, ON
Mar 30: Montreal Katacombes, QC
Mar 31: Londonderry Tupelo Music Hall, NH

Apr 1: Ottawa Brass Monkey, ON
Apr 2: Poughkeepsie The Chance, NY
Apr 4: New York B.B. King’s, NY
Apr 5: Sellersville Theater, PN
Apr 6: Pittsburgh Rex Theater, PN
Apr 8: Melbourne Black Box Theater, FL

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ALICE IN CHAINS TO OPEN FOR GUNS N’ ROSES’ VEGAS SHOWS, FORMER GUNS GUITARIST IZZY STRADLIN WILL NOT BE JOINING THE REUNION SHOWS

ALICEINCHAINS Publicity Pic credit Dave Ma

Alice In Chains will open for Guns N’ Roses at their sold-out Las Vegas dates on April 8th and 9th.

In January it was announced that Axl Rose, Slash and Duff McKagan would appear together onstage again at the Las Vegas dates and a pair of Mexico City concerts in-between headline appearances at Coachella later in the month. It was also recently revealed that Izzy Stradlin wouldn’t be joining his former bandmates in the original lineup.

The former guitarist said, “At this point in time, I will not be playing at any of the April 2016 GNR shows. I’ve also not been in the studio recording or writing with any of the others recently. There is so much speculation, but so very little info, that I thought I should reach out.”

additional source: classicrock.teamrock.com

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NEW SCOTT WEILAND BOOK ‘MEMORIES OF A ROCK STAR’ TELLS THE INSIDE STORY OF THE LATE GREAT ROCK SINGER

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From late 1992 and throughout the remainder of the decade, if you spent any amount of time watching MTV or listening to rock radio, you were bound to come in contact with a tune by Stone Temple Pilots. With such classic releases as Core, Purple, and Tiny Music…Songs from the Vatican Gift Shop selling millions and spawning countless hits (Sex Type Thing, Plush, Creep, Vasoline, Interstate Love Song, Big Empty, Big Bang Baby, etc.), STP is now widely considered one of rock’s all-time great acts.

And during this time, there were few rock frontmen who commanded an audience and generated as many headlines as Scott Weiland. Despite fronting another successful band, Velvet Revolver, and issuing his own critically acclaimed solo albums, Weiland could not overcome his demons – passing away in 2015 (at the age of 48).

Scott Weiland: Memories of a Rock Star features nearly 30 all-new interviews conducted exclusively for this book, including members of bands that toured with STP (Megadeth, Meat Puppets, Blind Melon, etc.), worked with Scott (Scott’s autobiography co-author David Ritz, video directors Kevin Kerslake and Josh Taft, producer/engineer Chris Goss, etc.), or were friends and/or admirers of Scott’s music (Richard Patrick, Bob Forrest, Matt Pinfield, Eddie Trunk, etc.). Get ready for an honest and accurate portrayal of Scott Weiland.

Scott Weiland: Memories of a Rock Star is available as a paperback version [294 pages, $19.99], a Kindle download [$9.99], a Nook download [$9.99] and an iBook download [$9.99].

Read two excerpts here and here

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VAN HALEN FRONTMAN DAVID LEE ROTH SAYS NEW SONG “AIN’T NO CHRISTMAS” COULD BE ABOUT THE BAND

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David Lee Roth says that his new song, in which he offers a sad goodbye against a low-key guitar accompaniment, could be about Van Halen reports blabbermouth.net.

Lyrically, Ain’t No Christmas sounds like Roth is closing the door on the current Van Halen reunion, with lines that include, “Sure looked good on paper, once upon a lie. Happily never after, and I’m not okay to drive.

Let’s put the pin back in this one, and say we both survived. Last blank space on the map I think we’ve arrived…

“Quittin’ while you’re ahead ain’t quittin’, and I’m quittin’.”

After initially denying that the song was about Van Halen — telling the Van Halen News Desk that “It’s poetry. It has nothing to do with Van Halen.” Roth has since released a follow-up message, saying, “On second thought, if all work is autobiographic, maybe this song is about Van Halen…”

Greg Renoff, author of the new book Van Halen Rising, was one of many fans who thought Ain’t No Christmas was the singer’s goodbye message to Van Halen. Renoff said, “Roth’s vocal performance here is mournful and somber. His lyrics express feelings of bitterness and regret. My take is that the lyrics provide a commentary on Roth’s recent months with Van Halen and perhaps a window into the future of Van Halen.”

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