Archive for the rock category.

Q&A with Hurt

It’s three in the afternoon and I’m talking to Paul Spatola, lead guitarist for Hurt, and I’m in Staples, scribbling down notes onto a pad of paper that I haven’t bought yet. Hurt is the Los Angeles metal band with 40367 MySpace friends that released their first album, Volume 1, in 2006 to resounding critical acclaim and is now promoting their new album, Volume 2. They logged two Top 15 Active Rock hits with “Rapture” and “Falls Apart”. Outside of the USA, their biggest fan base is in Finland. The winds have blown them across America to Hartford, CT where they are performing live tonight.

SCENE & HEARD: So, what are you guys doing here in Connecticut?

PAUL: We’re just did some radio Friday; we’ve been doing a lot of radio recently- we’ve been trying to do as much radio as possible. We’re doing some soundchecks at the moment and then we’re going to go out and play tonight. Pretty much what we do every day…

S&H: So, what are your major musical influences?

P: I’m actually influenced by everything. I started playing piano when I was five and I’ve been listening to all kinds of music, even classical music, since then. Yeah, I wouldn’t say I’ve got one single influence – I try to pick up as much as I can from everywhere.

S&H: How has the Internet and iTunes affected the recording industry? I’ve noticed that your songs are available on AOL music player…

P: Well, internet music, it’s good and it’s bad. On the good side, the fans can listen on the internet all the time and comment on the message board saying “I love this song” or whatever. But on the bad side, it’s ruining the recording industry. Especially with things like iTunes, people are no longer buying music and records any more, but they’re stealing them.

S&H: Your lyrics are really angry, what are you rebelling against?

P: I don’t really write the lyrics; Jay writes them about personal matters and puts spin on some of the situations he’s been through. We let him do that because they trust him to write his own lyrics. I just concentrate on making the music.

S&H: What’s the craziest thing that’s ever happened to the band?

P: What do you mean crazy?

S&H: Like on tour, for example.

P: Well I can’t think of anything that’s been that crazy, when you get up on stage in front of thousands of people and play music, that’s crazy, y’know, you can’t believe that’s happening.

S&H: You say on your music blog that your music has the “power to save lives”, how would you say that’s possible?

P: I guess people out there that really connect with what we’re saying, they feel like they’re not alone any more. It really helps them through the day because they need that stuff and if our music saves lives, that’s great, that’s what we’re doing it for.

S&H: So, what are you listening to at the moment? What metal bands are good?

P: I don’t really listen to that much metal, I’ve been listening to Bloc Party a lot, they’re great. Yeah, the only metal I really listen to is Slipknot. Otherwise I listen to a lot of classic rock, Zeppelin and stuff. Apart from Block Party, I mainly listen to older stuff.

S&H: And what about the rap scene?

P: I don’t really listen to it; there are some good things but, no I don’t really listen to rap. But if there’s a song with something about it lyrically that’s good, I’m not gonna shut it out, you’ve gotta be open to everything, otherwise that’s ignorant.

S&H: Would you like to expand your music to an international scene?

P: I would love to go international, unfortunately it requires a great deal of planning and money and we’re concentrating on the US at the moment. We hope that we’re going to hit Europe as soon as possible, on our blog; there are fans from Germany, Britain and Finland, places that we’ve never been to before. We ant to bring the live show over there as it’s a pretty different experience and it seems that everywhere except the USA, people are interested in listening to good music and enjoy going to live shows.

S&H: How did the band form?

P: Well Jay was spotted out in Virginia where he played with a band. A PR guy said he liked his stuff but not his band’s and he brought him to LA. He was hooked up with Evan who was a studio drummer and Josh who was a guitarist from New Jersey who called me up when they said they needed another guitarist. We started doing tests and we were signed a couple of weeks later.

S&H: So, does your band have a message for Yale or America?

P: We don’t have a specific message. Jay’s lyrics are different versions of what ‘Hurt’ means, it can be pain, sadness or whatever. Jay doesn’t like to explain his lyrics, he likes to leave them to open interpretation. He wants people to read whatever they want into them. We’re not trying to be political; we don’t have a specific message.

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Filled under written by Nicolas Niarchos, rock, Uncategorized | Read More...

Springsteen in concert

Governor Jodi Rell declared October 2 to be “Bruce Springsteen Day.” The Boss and the E Street Band kicked off the “Magic” tour Tuesday in Hartford – so with citizens making the pilgrimage up 1-91, airwaves crowded by tracks off the new album of the same name and the state officially endorsing all this frenzy, Connecticut was hit hard by Bruce fever.

“Magic” is here to advertise his new album and showcase old hands – even though we were told that last time was the “last time,” Clarence Clemens, Max Weinberg and all the others were back in full force. The crowd was assembled by 7:30, clutching stadium hotdogs, wearing old tour t-shirts that might as well have carbon dated them and skipping the bathroom line for the time being, lest they miss the opening chords of – what would he start with? A new track, maybe? “Magic” itself? Or “Born to Run”? “Born in the USA”? An hour passed; it was getting difficult to keep that breath held in.

And then - ! “Radio Nowhere” – a new song, but one that the entire crowd seemed to know the words to by the end. He was back at it, and man, can this guy perform. The concert went on for a seamless two hours and was – this is the mark of a good show – one where you just couldn’t sit down. Even if you couldn’t dance, you could sway, or raise your hands, or just try to get a tiny bit closer to that god gracing this Hartford stage. Bruce Springsteen was, for the night, an undisputed messiah: Liberating baby boomers from their generational label, liberating listeners from substandard music – liberating a student or two from hours otherwise spent in SML. He’d simply lift up his arms and the entire crowd responded with a salute to the sexiest man this side of Jersey.

The band did a good job of tempering new music with old; though ostensibly designed to promote the new tracks, this tour seemed just as eager to give loyal fans a sampling of those stand-bys well-known and loved. A nod to “Born to Run” (“She’s the One” was greeted with screams of delight) segued neatly with the relatively unknown “Devil’s Arcade” and “Girls In Their Summer Clothes.” These new songs bore the Boss stamp – upbeat, tightly crafted, perfect for singing along to – but were sometimes grounded by a more Americana, down-home element, perhaps a result of his summer collaboration with Pete Seeger. A balance was struck between coherence and variety; nothing seemed out of place – not too pop, not too folksy – but he kept things interesting. The constant switching of guitars between songs wasn’t just some flashy move but really indicated the concert’s breadth.

They left the stage after 90 minutes or so and came back for three or four rounds of encores – a kind of neat microcosm of Springsteen and the E Street Band’s collaborative trajectory. You might think that was the last – and how good it was! A great note to end on! – but then, of course, they come back for more. And more, and more. No one was going to complain about that; the deep, collective rumblings of “Bruuuuuuce” reverberated through the Civic Center until the lights finally came back on and concert-goers left that magic behind and returned to the real world.

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Filled under written by Anna Pitoniak, concert review, rock | Read More...

“Further North” by Johnathan Rice

In Johnathan Rice’s newest album “Further North,” the 24-year-old singer/songwriter successfully combines granola folk music with a head-bopping rhythm that is easy to groove to.

He continues the use of avant-garde sound effects begun in his previous album “Trouble is Real,” utilizing the sound of a camera winding to set a beat in the first single of the album, entitled “Stay at Home.” In the beginning tracks, Rice successfully draws the listener into his groove with lyrics such as “I took a camera on vacation to put Miami in a frame.” His words are not lost among the instrumentals, which are soft enough to underscore his vocals and complement Rice’s raspy voice — which recalls both the softness of John Mayer and drawling, elongated style of Dave Matthews Band — complements his folksy lyrics and soft rock appeal. The single “We’re All Stuck Out in The Desert,” while suffering slightly from the monotonous repetition of the title line, perfectly exudes Rice’s left-of-center viewpoint, with lyrics such as “an investment banker started something so I broke his neck.”

The lyrics and beat of most of the tracks are intriguing enough to arouse the curiosity of most soft rock aficionados, while accessible enough to appeal to many mainstream music listeners. The final half of the tracks on the album tend more towards the rock end of the musical spectrum, as Rice’s voice hardens and evolves with the tracks to a completely surprising end with the tracks “Hard to Believe” and “It is Best to Keep it All Inside,” depressing and cynically self-pitying creations which seem unbelievably anti-Rice. An evolutionary album for the artist, Johnathan Rice’s “Further North” is certainly worth a few listens.

Listen to Johnathan Rice at www.myspace.com/johnathanrice

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Filled under album review, written by Amanda Glassman, rock | Read More...

Q&A with Brian Molko of Placebo

Projekt Revolution Tour 8/26/07 Hartford, CT 3:15 p.m.

Between sips of Red Bull and long drags on three (I counted) Marlboro Lights, Brian Molko, the lead singer of Placebo – the best of six main stage acts at Linkin Park’s 2007 Projekt Revolution tour — acted calm and cozy less than two hours before show time. I found Molko, once infamous for pushing the envelope with androgynous costumes and irreverent lyrics, surprisingly normal. He carried the conversation in much the same way he lead Placebo onstage: with an old soul’s mix of humor, maturity and impatience.

Scene&Heard: How did Placebo get to be one of six main stage acts at this year’s Projekt Revolution?

Brian Molko: We’re here because Linkin Park invited us. Chester [Bennington] and Mike [Shinoda] are fans of the band.

S&H: How would you describe the dynamic between all these different bands?

Molko: It’s a really good vibe backstage. Linkin Park are very approachable – not only are they approachable but they approach you. There are no big egos floating around – it’s great… I was kind of expecting there to be a lot of people running around backstage with bottles of Jack Daniels and ruby sluts hanging off their arms… But it’s been really cool. It hasn’t been that rock-and-roll cliché. Which I’m really happy about, because I’m not a particularly big fan – not a fan at all – of that rock-and-roll cliché.

(More after the jump)

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Filled under rock, written by Justin Jannise, scenic interview | Read More...