How typical Central American fans see tours from bands like Iron Maiden?
February 29, 2008
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How typical Central American fans see tours from bands like Iron Maiden?
With not so many bands visiting the region, this is a rare treat for fans. The amount of bands visiting the region is growing. It seems Iron Maiden is leading the pack so is metal as genre.
I knew that this was a historic day for Costa Rica. Never in my 18 years of listening to heavy metal and living the underground scene had I observed a sea of black t-shirts so large as on that day.
http://www.costaricapages.com/blog/costa-rican-music/iron-maiden-fan/657
Interview: Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin is ready to take band on tour after September
February 29, 2008
Interview: Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin is ready to take band on tour after September
Confidence builds within the members of the bands to carry something out for a Led Zep tour. We just need to truly convince Robert Plant. We got until Sept to do that.
"The amount of work we put into O2 was what you would normally put into a world tour anyway…Robert Plant has a parallel project and he is busy with that until September"
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/01/30/DDNBUOAAK.DTL
Interview: Slash talks about his quitting from Gun N Roses before the Chinese Democracy album
February 29, 2008
Interview: Slash talks about his quitting from Gun N Roses before the Chinese Democracy album
WIth TImeout Dubai, Slash of Velvet Revolver talks:
On surviving the ’80s and ’90s excess
"Oh yeah, there are moments when I stop and think of that, I definitely feel like I’m blessed because I’m still here, and I really had every reason to not be. . . Either someone’s been looking out for me or it’s just sheer luck, but because of that I decided that I should probably stop taking it for granted. That I should put my nose to the grindstone and do what my whole purpose for being here is."
On the fact that GUNS N’ ROSES never seemed to fit in with the ’80s L.A. scene:
"As soon as the ’80s started, there was not a lot going on to be influenced by. Everything that inspired me was the stuff I listened to while growing up, and there was a dramatic shift in the ’80s — GUNS N’ ROSES was a proponent of change. We were a result of what the ’80s was all about and the antitheses of it."
On the height of GUNS N’ ROSES’ success:
"We got to a point where it was really huge and it was fun in lots of ways, and in a lot of ways it was very overwhelming. But I enjoyed it, especially given where we all came from, which was basically nothing, to becoming this huge band on a global level."
"It had its moments where it became a little excessive. Luckily there was always some semblance of clarity which basically won out in the end. When I was working I never felt as destructive as when I wasn’t working, and that was my problem — I figured that one out over the years."
On his decision to quit GUNS N’ ROSES in 1996:
"It was a huge relief when I made that decision. From the early ’90s onwards it was a very stressful situation, so I relieved myself of that burden, but then it was a hell of a lot of work to keep that all going, because from then I was out on my own. It’s a tough business, I learned a lot about it, and I learned that without the umbrella of the whole GUNS N’ ROSES name, I needed to be a bit more alert on a regular basis to stay afloat — it was slow learning . . . The one thing I learned? To take charge of everything to do with my career… and really not to trust anybody."
On the perceived wisdom that NIRVANA and the Seattle grunge scene overtook hard rock (and bands like GUNS N’ ROSES) in the early 90s:
"That’s pretty much a line of bulls*** right there, that never happened. Basically the band broke up right around the time that all that was happening, and a lot of the grunge bands — who are majorly influenced by GUNS N’ ROSES — all of a sudden thought they’d taken over. But we just broke up and it had nothing to do with what was going on [with grunge], because in 1994 we were still the biggest stadium band, so it didn’t really have any effect on us."
http://www.metalunderground.com/news/details.cfm?newsid=34356
Interview: How much tour support can Slash and Velvet Revolver give for ailing drug fined Scott Weiland?
February 29, 2008
Interview: How much tour support can Slash and Velvet Revolver give for ailing drug fined Scott Weiland?
WIth TImeout Dubai, Slash of Velvet Revolver talks:
On singer Scott Weiland’s recent rehab stint:
"He’s in rehab so I think he’s doing OK. We helped him in the very early days, and we are always there if he needs support, but at this moment he’s being taken care of."
From:
http://www.metalunderground.com/news/details.cfm?newsid=34356
Has Rage Against the Machine crossed the fine line with their overprice tour tickets?
February 29, 2008
Has Rage Against the Machine crossed the fine line with their overprice tour tickets?
Did this band cross the line of the being anti corporate by overpricing tickets. They were $70.
"They want to stay anti-corporate and they want to keep everything free and not charge for things. Now, they want to charge $75 per ticket, and Alan Ginsberg charged between $25-$50 to see him read in the later years of his life."







