dielukedie:

demoncity:

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There’s no normal life, Wyatt. There’s just life. Now get on with it.

Val Kilmer as Doc Holliday
TOMBSTONE
1993 — dir. George P. Cosmatos

RIP

black-arcana:

LZZY HALE On Upcoming HALESTORM Record: ‘This Is Our Favorite Album We’ve Ever Done’

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In a new interview with Cutter’s RockcastHALESTORM frontwoman Lzzy Hale spoke about the band’s songwriting and recording sessions with acclaimed Grammy-winning producer Dave Cobb, known for his previous collaborations with the likes of Sammy HagarSlashGRETA VAN FLEET and RIVAL SONS. Asked if the band’s follow-up to 2022's “Back From The Dead” album was “done”, Lzzy said (as transcribed by BLABBERMOUTH.NET): “Yes. Literally we’re getting mixes back as we speak.”

Regarding the musical direction of the new HALESTORM material, Lzzy said: “It’s really hard to describe this one. We did the record with Dave Cobb, which is a new producer for us. His ADHD mixed very well with our ADHD. But we didn’t do it traditionally the way we always do these albums. First day, we walked in and I always have, like, whatever, a ton of half-written songs or full-written songs, or, 'Here’s a riff or whatever’ — you come in with your bag of tricks. And Dave Cobb says, 'Oh, we’re not gonna do any of that.’ And I’m, like, 'What do you mean?’ He’s, like, 'We’re not doing demos. I hate demos. What we’re gonna do is we’re gonna start and we’re gonna write, and as we’re writing, we’re recording at the same time.’ So that’s what we did. The first day we actually ended up writing our first single that’ll be coming out soon. But, yeah, we started, like, 'Okay, who’s got a line?’ 'Oh, I have this that I thought of yesterday.’ 'Cool. That’ll work. Let’s go.’ Set up the drums, set up the guitar, here’s the vocals. And so we would be recording while we were writing it, and then we would get done and we would move on to the next day. And so there are songs that don’t even have a click track to them or a guide because we forgot.”

Lzzy continued: “There’s so many different elements of songs that we used to write when we were kids, but, obviously, as adults — a lot of that feeling. It was kind of an emotional rollercoaster. There’s also, I think, some of the heaviest songs we’ve ever written on there, some really beautiful mid-tempos. A lot of personalities that I’ve always wanted to kind of put on a record, but I never really had the freedom or time to, because usually when we do a HALESTORM record, it’s, like, 'Okay, we have to have all the songs picked. We have to have them rehearsed.’ We go in and kind of do it like an assembly line. Like, 'Okay, you do the bass, do the drums, do the guitar, do the vocals, and we’re good.’ So there’s no time to really like sit with things before they’re, like, 'Okay, we’ve already decided we’re gonna do that.’ And so the freedom and kind of the nerve-racking kind of element of the fact that there wasn’t really a plan ended up being the special sauce on this album, because we were just chasing everything that got us excited. And if it wasn’t a 'hell yeah’, it was a 'hell no’. So there’s nothing on there on this album that we don’t feel complete ownership over. There’s nothing on this album that anybody forced us to do. There’s nothing on this album that isn’t part of our personalities.”

Elaborating on why the new HALESTORM album feels like it is a return to the band’s roots in a way, Lzzy said: “My bass player said it yesterday. He’s, like, 'It’s kind of like this long road to the beginning,’ 'cause all of the guys at one point in time said this really feels like we’re back in our parents’ basement again and we’re hustling and we’re trying to figure out how to write songs on the radio. But we have all this knowledge now. So everything ended up coming together so incredibly well. But it was almost like the reverse, that the music was telling us what to do and not us trying to like shoehorn anything in.

"I’m telling you, man, — it is the most HALESTORM record we’ve ever done," Lzzy added. "It is the first time in the 20 years we’ve been on Atlantic Records that we have not felt lorded over in regarding to making records, because usually it’s time crunch. Somebody’s always there being, like, 'Oh, we can’t do that.’ 'Oh, you probably shouldn’t say that.’ 'What about this thing?’ And that kind of thing. So it usually becomes like a project, like a group project.

"We didn’t do it in Nashville — we did it in Savannah, Georgia, locked in a house in the middle of nowhere, next to a river,” Hale revealed. “The guys and I would wake up like around 11:30 a.m., we would start recording and we wouldn’t stop until 4:00 a.m. And then we would annoy the hell out of the engineer who was trying to sleep with playing on the proper keyboard and coming up with weird stuff. But we were unsupervised in the best way, and it was all about, who are we now? Who were we then? This is our story. For me, when I listen to this album, it’s my personal opus — all the things that I’ve gone through in my life, both dark and not. There’s more questions than answers. It’s not just me giving myself a pep talk, like 'I’m the fire’, 'I’m back from the dead.’ It’s like I’m dealing with a lot of my reality and a lot of the reality of the world in my own way. And then it’s also our story as a band, and you can really hear it in the music and in the lyrics. So I’m so excited for people to hear it. And it’s to the point where it’s, like, I don’t even really care if anybody likes it because all four of us are, like, 'This is our favorite album we’ve ever done.’”

Earlier this year, Lzzy and her HALESTORM bandmate Joe Hottinger completed “Halestorm’s Lzzy And Joe: The Living Room Sessions” tour featuring the duo performing acoustic, stripped down versions of HALESTORM favorites and the music that inspired the band.

Cobb has shared in nine Grammy wins, including four for “Best Americana Album” and three for “Best Country Album”. He’s also been named “Producer Of The Year” by the Country Music Awards, the Americana Music Association (twice) and the Music Row Awards, and has been a Grammy nominee in the category.

Last summer HALESTORM and I PREVAIL completed a co-headlining tour. Produced by Live Nation, the trek was also the catalyst and the creative spark for HALESTORM and I PREVAIL’s collaborative track “Can U See Me In The Dark?”, which was released last June.

“Back From The Dead” has tallied over 100 million streams worldwide. Rolling Stone called the title track “a biting but cathartic howler about overcoming all obstacles,” and that song as well as “The Steeple” marked their fifth and sixth number ones at rock radio, respectively. Associated Press said the album “will definitely be in the running for best hard rock/metal album of the year.” Their previous album, “Vicious”, earned the band their second Grammy nomination, for “Best Hard Rock Performance” for the song “Uncomfortable”, the band’s fourth #1 at rock radio, and led Loudwire to name HALESTORM "Rock Artist Of The Decade" in 2019.

Fronted by Lzzy with drummer Arejay HaleHottinger and bass player Josh SmithHALESTORM’s music has earned multiple platinum and gold certifications from the RIAA, and the band has earned a reputation as a powerful live music force, headlining sold-out shows and topping festival bills around the world, and sharing the stage with icons including HEAVEN & HELLAlice CooperJoan Jett and JUDAS PRIEST. Additionally, Lzzy was named the first female brand ambassador for Gibson and served as host of AXS TV's “A Year In Music”.

(Source: blabbermouth.net)

robertreich:

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The oligarchy lost tonight. Congrats to @crawfordforwi and the entire state of Wisconsin!


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