mardi 5 août 2008

Amorphis


http://img105.imageshack.us/img105/9863/amorphis03nr8.jpg

Amorphis
is a Finnish metal band started by Jan Rechberger, Tomi Koivusaari and Esa Holopainen in 1990. Initially, the band was a straightforward death metal act, but in later albums they evolved into playing other types of genres.

Amorphis are well known for their use of the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala, as a source for their lyrics.

History

Formation and early years

In 1989, Jan Rechberger and Esa Holopainen played in a speed metal band Violent Solution, which Tomi Koivusaari had left the previous year to form up the death metal band Abhorrence. Violent Solution slowly withered away as the musicians involved became interested in other things and styles of music. At this point, Jan Rechberger and Esa Holopainen had the idea of putting together a death metal band. In early 1990, Tomi Koivusaari was asked to be the vocalist and Oppu Laine to be their bassist.

During that time the band asked Tomi to pick up the slot of rhythm guitarist as well as singing, which led to the band dumping all original compositions and starting all over again. With the band starting to move along, Tomi's other band (Abhorrence) split up and he found himself with much more time to put into Amorphis. Demo tape Disment Of Soul was recorded in 1991 by Timo Tolkki at TTT studios.

The Karelian Isthmus and Tales from the Thousand Lakes

Amorphis in 1992 with Jukka Kolehmainen of Abhorrence.

Amorphis in 1992 with Jukka Kolehmainen of Abhorrence.

Shortly after the band had recorded their first studio demo tape, Tomi got a letter from Relapse Records offering Abhorrence a recording contract. Since Abhorrence was no longer active, they quickly sent their own demo in the return mail and eventually got signed to a recording deal. The deal would later almost destroy the band, due to a very long commitment and poor artist relations. Soon after getting signed they quickly released their death metal debut, The Karelian Isthmus and later released the Privilege of Evil EP. The EP featured Abhorrence's original vocalist, Jukka Kolehmainen, as a vocalist on the Abhorrence cover song "Vulgar Necrolatry".

In 1994, Amorphis released their second studio album, Tales from the Thousand Lakes, a concept album based on the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala. This 1994 release, while still strongly rooted in death metal, is considered to be the first significant step toward a new direction as melodic clean vocals were added, provided by Ville Tuomi.

Elegy and Tuonela

The success of Tales from the Thousand Lakes was immediate and overwhelming. The ensuing tours and tough schedules, however, took their toll, and Kasper (keyboards) soon decided to leave the band. A successor was found in Kim Rantala. Jan was replaced by Pekka Kasari (ex-Stone), and just before recording their third album, Amorphis recruited a sixth member, singer Pasi Koskinen. The third album, Elegy was released in 1996. Lyrics were again adapted from Finnish mythology, in this case, the Kanteletar, a collection of ancient folk poetry. Pasi and Tomi shared the vocals on a roughly equal basis, with Pasi's role restricted to the clean parts.

After about one and a half years of extensive touring following the release of Elegy, the band members opted for a time-out to recharge and think about new material. Their next offering, 1999's Tuonela was a mellow guitar album, although toward the end of the studio sessions, Santeri Kallio of Kyyria was brought in to add some keyboard tracks to the songs. New instruments were introduced (Tomi playing sitar in the song "Greed", Sakari Kukko saxophonist/flautist also provided some foreign spices) and the death growls were now almost totally abandoned, as all vocals were performed by Pasi.

The new millennium was greeted with the tenth-anniversary compilation Story and another line-up change. Following the breakup of Kyyria, Santeri had already joined Amorphis as a full-time member when bassist Oppu felt he could no longer commit himself to the band. He was succeeded by another ex-Kyyria member, Niclas Etelävuori, who came in just in time for Amorphis' third U.S. tour.

Am Universum and Far from the Sun

T. Joutsen, J. Rechberger, E. Holopainen, N. Etelävuori and S. Kallio at Tuska Open Air Metal Festival 2006

T. Joutsen, J. Rechberger, E. Holopainen, N. Etelävuori and S. Kallio at Tuska Open Air Metal Festival 2006

Am Universum, released in 2001, retained the moody atmosphere of Tuonela but introduced more varied soundscapes and a much wider dynamic range. More space was given to keyboards and saxophone work, the latter again contributed by Sakari Kukko. It was a more experimental album, and arguably Amorphis' most psychedelic to date. In 2002 the band was asked for a contribution to the soundtrack for the movie Menolippu Mombasaan. The commissioned piece was a cover version of a 1976 Finnish pop hit, "Kuusamo", which was given the full Amorphis treatment and remains the band's only song in their native language to this day.

Amorphis' longstanding relationship with Relapse Records ended with Am Universum. In 2003, Relapse released the retrospective Chapters, which included a DVD featuring the band's videos from "Black Winter Day" to "Alone". Far from the Sun was produced by the band itself, which had been rejoined by original drummer Jan Rechberger after Pekka Kasari had quit to concentrate on family duties. Compared to Am Universum, Far From The Sun turned out heavier, more straightforward and also once again more folk-oriented. The album would have been accompanied by a North American tour in 2004 but it was ultimately canceled for reasons beyond the control of the band, yet the prospect of it gave Pasi, father of two small children and involved in numerous other musical projects, the reason he had been looking for to leave the band after nine years.

Eclipse, Silent Waters and present

Amorphis found his replacement, Tomi Joutsen (Sinisthra), through word of mouth. The band then did a successful US-tour and started to focus on new material. With Joutsen, a versatile singer able to perform clean vocals as well as death vocals, the band underwent a return to form, including some of the death metal elements of their earlier releases with their later period progressive sound. The group then recorded and released Eclipse, the band's seventh album.

The eighth album, "Silent Waters," continued in the vein of Eclipse, and was released on September 3, 2007.

Members

Current members

  • Tomi Joutsen – vocals
  • Esa Holopainen – guitar
  • Tomi Koivusaari – guitar
  • Niclas Etelävuori – bass
  • Santeri Kallio – keyboards
  • Jan Rechberger – drums

Former members

  • Pasi Koskinen – vocals (1996–2004)
  • Olli-Pekka Laine – bass (1992–1999)
  • Pekka Kasari – drums (1996–2002)
  • Kim Rantala – keyboards (1994–1998)
  • Kasper Mårtenson – keyboards (1993–1994)

Discography

Albums

Title Released
The Karelian Isthmus November 10, 1992
Tales from the Thousand Lakes July 12, 1994
Elegy May 14, 1996
Tuonela March 29, 1999
Am Universum April 3, 2001
Far from the Sun May 26, 2003
Eclipse February 15, 2006
Silent Waters August 29, 2007 (Finland)

August 31, 2007 (Worldwide)

Singles and EPs

  • Disment of Soul (1991)
  • Amorphis (1991)
  • Privilege of Evil (1993)
  • Black Winter Day (1995)
  • My Kantele (1997)
  • Divinity (1999)
  • Alone (2001)
  • Day of Your Beliefs (2003)
  • Evil Inside (2003)
  • House of Sleep (2005)
  • The Smoke (2006)
  • Silent Waters (2007)

Compilations

  • Story - 10th Anniversary (2000)
  • Chapters (CD and DVD, 2003)


Amon Amarth


http://www.metal-observer.com/pics/amonamarth/aapic1.jpg

Amon Amarth
is a Viking-themed melodic death metal band from Tumba, Sweden founded in 1992. It is named after a location in J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth. The name means "Mount Doom" in Sindarin, one of Tolkien's Elvish languages. The band was originally known as Scum, and released a single demo under that name in 1988 before changing their name to Amon Amarth in 1992.

History

Formed under the name Scum in 1988, the band was originally a grindcore group formed by Themgoroth (Dark Funeral), Olavi (guitar) and Ted (bass guitar). When Johan joined the band, it resulted in a musical change towards death metal. After a 1991 demo, they changed the band's name to Amon Amarth in 1992. After they became Amon Amarth, they released a demo recording, The Arrival of the Fimbul Winter, in 1994, selling all 1000 demo discs in less than 12 hours.[citation needed] This demo brought them to sign at Pulverised Records, on which they released in 1996 their first MCD Sorrow Throughout the Nine Worlds, from which they sold 6000 copies (spread throughout four different versions). This release brought them to sign with Metal Blade Records. With the release of the album Once Sent from the Golden Hall in 1998, their popularity rose internationally and since has meant multiple Canadian tours, US tours, festival appearances, five music videos, and appearances in over 100 metal magazines. In early January 2008, their first tour of Australia and New Zealand took place, along with supporting Dimmu Borgir on tour in Europe. They finished a US and Canadian tour with Sonic Syndicate and Himsa beforehand. Decapitated was scheduled to appear on tour with Amon Amarth but cancelled when their drummer, Witold "Vitek" Kieltyka, passed away on November 2nd in a Russian hospital due to injuries he sustained from a recent road collision. The group has gradually gained further exposure including Richard Christy on The Howard Stern Show mentioning his attendance at one of their concerts.

The February 2008 edition of Terrorizer magazine confirmed that the band is working on a new album due for a late summer release. Amon Amarth also extended their record deal with Metal Blade Records for three more albums.

The title of the new album by Amon Amarth is Twilight of the Thunder God, to be released on September 17, 2008 for Finland and Sweden. It will feature guest appearances by Lars Göran Petrov of Entombed, Roope Latvala of Children of Bodom, and the cello metal band Apocalyptica. Along with the release of the album will be an eight-page comic strip based on Norse mythology which will be released by magazines from all over Europe.

Amon Amarth will go on a North American headlining tour in October 2008, with support from Ensiferum, Belphegor, and a melodic death metal band from Tampa named The Absence.[6]

Musical style and lyrical themes

The four Swedish and one Finnish musician, who are known for their synchronised headbanging in music videos and at live performances, base most of their songs on Norse mythology, the Viking Age, and the pre-christian world. This mythology is an element that originally emerged as an ideological off-shoot of black metal known as Viking metal in the early 1990s, made popular by such bands as Bathory and Enslaved, although the band's sound is more in the vein of early Amorphis and mid-period Bolt Thrower. Lead singer Johan Hegg's sister sometimes contributes lyrics for the band.

When commenting on the name of the band, vocalist Johan Hegg has remarked:

...it was Ted who found the name. Don't ask me how cause none of us were ever really Lord of the Ring fans but it sounded cool and the meaning of it is killer! It's the name of "Mount Doom" in Sindarin, whatever that is, ask a Tolkien fan. But I think it's cool and really symbolizes what Amon Amarth stands for.

The Metal Web's interview with Johan Hegg

When asked to comment on the band's genre, vocalist Johan Hegg also remarked:

We play death metal. We write about vikings so therefore some refer us to viking metal, but I have no idea what that is. I can't imagine the viking’s veer into metal at all except on the swords and stuff. And musically, I guess they only played these strange lip instruments and some bongos or whatever.

The Metal Web's interview with Johan Hegg

Discography

Albums

Released Title Label
1991 Demo 1 Self-released as Scum
1993 Thor Arise Never released
1994 The Arrival of the Fimbul Winter Self-released, see below
1996 Sorrow Throughout the Nine Worlds Pulverised
1998 Once Sent from the Golden Hall Metal Blade
1999 The Avenger Metal Blade
2001 The Crusher Metal Blade
2002 Versus the World Metal Blade
2004 Fate of Norns Metal Blade
2006 With Oden on Our Side Metal Blade
2008 Twilight of the Thunder God (September 17, 2008) Metal Blade

Thor Arise

Thor Arise is a demo by the Swedish melodic death metal band Amon Amarth, recorded in 1993. The album was never initially released due to its low production standards. The album features "Sabbath Bloody Sabbath" a cover song after Black Sabbath. The song, "Thor Arise" was re-recorded as a bonus track on the digipak version of The Avenger. "Risen from the Sea" was re-recorded on The Crusher. The entire album was re-released with the "Viking Edition" of Versus the World.

Track listing

  1. "Risen from the Sea" − 5:43
  2. "Atrocious Humanity" − 5:54
  3. "Army of Darkness" − 5:26
  4. "Thor Arise" − 6:30
  5. "Sabbath Bloody Sabbath" − 4:22 (Black Sabbath cover)

Credits

  • Nico Kaukinen − drums
  • Olavi Mikkonen − guitar
  • Johan Hegg − death vocals
  • Anders Hansson − guitar
  • Ted Lundström − bass

The Arrival of the Fimbul Winter

The Arrival of the Fimbul Winter is a demo self-released in 1994. Its original release was limited and consisted of 1000 copies. The demo was released on three different colour tapes with different styles. The "labels" for the demo aren't professionally-made, and were created by the band for the release of the demo.

Track listing

  1. "Burning Creation" − 4:48
  2. "The Arrival of the Fimbul Winter" − 4:38
  3. "Without Fear" − 4:42

Credits

  • Nico Mehra − drums
  • Olavi Mikkonen − guitars
  • Johan Hegg − vocals
  • Anders Hannson − guitars
  • Ted Lundström − bass

Videography

Aestheticom, a music video production company, was chosen to produce videos for "Runes to My Memory" and "Cry of the Black Birds", both directed by Bill Schacht.

Released Title Producer
2003 Death in Fire
2004 The Pursuit of Vikings
2006 Wrath of the Norsemen
2006 Runes to My Memory
2007 Cry of the Black Birds

Members

Amon Amarth on Metalmania Festival 2005 in Poland

Amon Amarth on Metalmania Festival 2005 in Poland

Current members

  • Johan Hegg − vocals
  • Johan Söderberg − guitars
  • Olavi Mikkonen − guitars
  • Ted Lundström − bass guitar
  • Fredrik Andersson − drums

Former Members

As Amon Amarth:

  • Anders Hansson − guitars (Thor Arise - Sorrow Throughout the Nine Worlds - Once Sent from the Golden Hall)
  • Nico Kaukinen − drums (Thor Arise - Sorrow Throughout the Nine Worlds)
  • Martin Lopez − drums

As Scum:

  • Paul "Themgoroth" Mäkitalo − vocals (left the band before the demo was released, when it was named Scum)

American Head Charge


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American Head Charge
(often referred to as Head Charge or abbreviated AHC) is an nu metal/industrial metal band from Minneapolis, Minnesota USA, earning nominations at the Kerrang! Awards on two occasions.

The band's sound has often been described as an "intense hybrid of the US Chicagoan industrial band Ministry and Iowan metallers Slipknot"; they contributed a cover of "Irresponsible Hate Anthem" for Anthems of Rust and Decay: A Tribute to Marilyn Manson as well as "Filth Pig" to Devilswork: A Tribute to Ministry, while they supported System of a Down and Slipknot on the Pledge of Allegiance festival tour in 2001.

History

Formation

The genesis of the band name

Early incarnations of the band sported the monikers Flux, Gestapo Pussy Ranch, and Warsaw Ghetto Pussy, although these were shortlived. The name Flux was already adopted by another band and so was dropped due to fear from copyright infringement and libel, while the latter names were abandoned within a period of six months so as not to alienate prospective label interest. "I'm a fan of 3-word names", Hanks reflected in a December 2001 Livewire interview. In reference to the current band moniker, he confessed; "It means nothing. No meaning by it. Pretty much that purpose right there."^ Although sometimes speculated that their name was taken from Adrian Sherwood's famous dub label On-U Sound act African Head Charge, which was formed in the early 1980s, it is in fact a coincidence. Chad Hanks remarked in an interview before they were signed that "It turns out that there is actually a band called African Head Charge; its so hard to be original these days."

The release of Trepanation

After settling on the name American Head Charge, the band made their debut on the underground fringes of the industrial metal scene with their 1999 album Trepanation. The personnel on this album saw Heacock and Hanks (now respectively rechristened Martin Cock and Mr. H. C. Banks III) joined by guitarist David Rogers, Justin Fowler on keyboards and samples and Chris Emery on drums.

Further exposure came through two track offerings to Dwell Records tribute albums, namely in homage to industrial bands Ministry and Marilyn Manson respectively.

Second guitarist Wayne Kile and keyboard player Aaron Zilch joined the quintets ranks during mid/late 1999.

After performing at a support showcase featuring System of a Down in Des Moines, Iowa during August 1999., Head Charge made a record deal with American Recordings.

The War of Art

[edit] Recording information

After the widespread release of Trepanation, AHC began recording their second album with the aid of Rick Rubin in 2001. The War of Art sold in the region of 12,000 copies in the United States during its first week of release in late August 2001. However, like many "heavy" bands at the time, sales of the album suffered soon after the 9/11 attacks.

Tour

American Head Charge, commencing a live schedule in support of their major label debut, began their professional touring experience on Ozzy Osbourne's 2001 Ozzfest, playing 3rd on the "Second Stage" for the entire tour. They then snagged a slot upon the "Pledge of Allegiance" festival tour, headlined by bands like Slipknot, Mudvayne, Rammstein and System of a Down. Guitarist Dave Rogers marked their concluding show of this tour in New Jersey by wholly playing the concert performance naked; this led to his subsequent arrest after the performance. In December 2001, the band co-supported Slayer alongside Ohio metalcore band Chimaira for the first two months of the American "God Hates Us All" tour. Following shows were headlined by Kittie, hardcore punk band Biohazard, and Texan stoner rockers Speedealer, preceding a 4 month Scandinavian/European/UK/Japanese tour headlined by Slipknot. Additional bands they've toured with include Coal Chamber, Ministry, Gravity Kills, Hatebreed, Static-X, Mudvayne, and Otep.

Guitarist Wayne Kile departed from the industrial outfit in early April 2002, paving the way for the induction of former Black Flood Diesel guitarist Bryan Ottoson to undertake the open position. Just 24 hours after getting the offer to join the band, Ottoson flew to Los Angeles and duly marked his inclusion to the band participating in the filming of the music video "Just So You Know".

The Feeding

After a two year hiatus, drugs had taken control of much of the band. According to AHC's MySpace article, three members of the band had become chemically dependent, with two of them going back into rehab. Guitarist Bryan Ottoson even stated that the band looked so doomed that he was almost checked into a mental institution for fear of suicide.

The remains of the band, with a couple new faces, pulled together and started writing and recording. During the demo process, "The War of Art" producer and American Recordings label owner Rick Rubin became increasingly elusive, and the band subsequently asked to be let out of their recording contract. Rubin respected their request without any legal squables. The band's producer on The Feeding was The War of Art's engineer Greg Fidelman. AHC recorded for four months, feeling this was by far their most disciplined record to date. The Feeding was released on February 15, 2005. The Feeding only spawned one radio and video single: "Loyalty".

Death of guitarist Bryan Ottoson

Guitarist Bryan Ottoson : 1978-2005

Guitarist Bryan Ottoson : 1978-2005

Guitarist Bryan Ottoson died at the age of 27 in the middle of an early 2005 tour conducted with the bands Mudvayne, Life of Agony, and Bloodsimple in tow. The musician's body was found lying on a sleeping bunk on the band's tour bus in North Charleston, South Carolina, where the group was scheduled to perform at the Plex club.

According to North Charleston police documents, scene investigators concluded the guitarist's death was the result of an accidental prescription drug overdose Police discovered a pill bottle of "numerous amounts of prescription medicine" in Ottoson's bunk. Ottoson had been battling severe strep throat with prescribed penicillin, and he was also given an unnamed pain medication. It was also stated that his overdose was purely accidental.

Band members informed police they last saw Ottoson alive around 4 a.m. on April 18, 2005, as they went to sleep before leaving Jessup, Maryland. Ottoson had consumed "a large amount of alcohol at a bar" in Jessup that evening, according to police documents. This statement is reported as inaccurate by bassist/co-founder Chad Hanks: "Bryan, myself, and our tech D-Rock walked to the bar just before last call, and we were stone cold sober. We all had two shots of vodka and one beer each. No more. No less. If 3 drinks is a 'large amount of alcohol', then apparently my mother is a raging alcoholic."

Police were called to the scene around 6:30 p.m. Tuesday; Ottoson was deceased by this time. Hanks and Cheema remarked to police that "Ottoson was a heavy sleeper, and it was not uncommon for him to sleep late before a concert."

Firing of Christopher Emery

Drummer Christopher Emery was fired from American Head Charge onstage on February 11, 2006 with reasons by the band being cited as "major irresponsibility", "decreased drumming ability" and "an inflated sense of entitlement". In a joint statement via their official website, bassist/co-founder Chad Hanks and singer/co-founder Cameron Heacock revealingly stated:

"It turns out Chris was thinking of leaving anyway, although we only just found out by his posting on our website. Before the show, I pulled our guitar tech into the hallway and said 'Mark my words. If he quits, he'll blame it on the bands drug use and his inability to deal with his own drug use.' Everyone knows our addiction history. Hell, it's part of our bio. And it's common knowledge we're no angels. But Chris was one of those guys that felt like he had to go to rehab every 9 months. We're no worse than when we met him. Drugs aren't the problem. The problem is that his brain and heart were no longer in it, his responsibility level became non-exsistant, and his playing became so drastically inconsistent that I had to fire him onstage at our last show of "The Feeding" touring cycle. I had made a sign in advance that said "I'M FIRED" and held it up to him halfway through the set when I got sick of how godawful his playing and professionalism were that night. It was embarrassing and our fans didn't deserve it. He was a major factor in our pulling the last seven songs out of our set. It made me furious, and I'm glad we won't have to deal with it anymore." Chad Hanks spoke candidly about this incident on All Knowing Force.

First DVD and recording a new album

On 3 April 2007 American Head Charge released their first ever DVD, Can't Stop the Machine through Nitrus Records. Along with it came a 10 track CD with live and unreleased songs, including a remix of The War of Art single "Just So You Know".

As of July 6, 2007, having completed a 2 month U.S. tour behind Can't Stop the Machine the band are currently in Minneapolis working on their 3rd studio album. No date has been announced for the release as of yet.

Band members

Current

  • Cameron Heacock - Vocals (1996 - present)
  • Chad Hanks - Bass (1996 - present)
  • Justin Fowler - Keyboards (2000 - present)
  • Karma Singh Cheema - Guitar (2004-2005, 2007 - present)
  • Benji Hellberg - Guitar (2005 - present)
  • Dane Tuders - Drums (February 2006 - present)

Former

  • Chris Emery - Keyboards (1996 - 2000), Drums (2000 - February 2006)
  • Bryan Ottoson - Guitar (April 2002 - April 19, 2005 deceased)
  • Dave Rogers - Guitar (1996 - 2003)
  • Aaron Zilch - Electronics (mid/late 1999 - January 2003)
  • Wayne Kile - Guitar (mid/late 1999 - April 2002)
  • Peter Harmon - Drums (1997 - 2000)
  • Nicolas Quijano - Guitar (2006-2007 European Occupation Tour)
  • Anthony Burke - Guitar (fill-in 2006)
  • Jamie White - Keyboards (1996, never recorded or played live)

Discography

Albums

  • Trepanation (July 18, 1999) Independent
  • The War of Art (August 28, 2001) American Recordings
  • Just So You Know (EP) American Recordings
  • The Feeding (February 15, 2005) DRT Entertainment/Nitrus
  • Can't Stop the Machine (DVD/CD) (April 3, 2007) Nitrus

Music videos

Song Director Album Label Additional Information
"Just So You Know" Kevin Kerslake The War of Art American Recordings American Head Charge's first official music video.
"All Wrapped Up" Tomas Migone The War of Art American Recordings Banned due to visceral images within video.
"Loyalty" Mike Sloat The Feeding DRT Entertainment/Nitrus First official music video release taken from The Feeding.
"Cowards" Mike Sloat The Feeding DRT Entertainment/Nitrus First UNOFFICIAL music video release taken from The Feeding.

Compilation appearances

Date of Release Title Album Label Additional Information
January 25, 2000 "Filth Pig" Devilswork: A Tribute to Ministry Dwell Ministry cover
June 6, 2000 "Irresponsible Hate Anthem" Anthems of Rust and Decay: A Tribute to Marilyn Manson Dwell Marilyn Manson cover
March 26, 2002 "Seamless" (Live) Pledge of Allegiance Tour: Live Concert Recording Columbia Records
August 25, 2002 "Reach and Touch" (Live) Ozzfest 2001: Second Millennium Columbia Records
August 24, 2004 "Cowards" UFC: Ultimate Beat downs, Vol. 1 DRT Entertainment First taste of The Feeding

Rare, Demo And Unreleased songs

Demos and Rare Songs is an album that can be predominantly found through South American sourced sites. It is in no way endorsed by AHC or even regarded as an authentic/official release. It’s clear to hear the songs that went through the production stage but just never made the final cut. Opening song "Only Way Out" has a polished sound with crisp vocals as well as sound effects included too. The toned down screams suggest it arrived around the period for The Feeding and although I can’t suggest a song it could replace on the album, it’s hard to see why it did make the grade. The recording of "All Too Comfortable" stutters every few seconds but the core of the song is excellent. "17" has the intro of War of Art track "A Violent Reaction" but other than that the song structure is totally different. It, also a track from The Feeding era, sounds slightly less clean but some of the melodic moments come off brilliantly and if it sounded this good pre production, the postproduction sound could have been huge. "Run Away From Me" ventures into a very different AHC sound, it has the heavy rasp of the guitars as usual but the chorus hits an optimistic, lifting tone that exhibits Cameron’s diversity in vocals to another level. The first War Of Art session track features in "Real Life", a track that was released with the "Just So You Know" single. It’s perfectly produced and sounds like it was a high contender for the album. I’m "Not Dead Yet" is very guitar heavy with vocals almost indistinguishable but its clear enough to hear the overall grasp of the song. It lacks the punch of the previous rare tracks, partly due to its lack of mastering however it does feature a core minute that was used in The Feeding track Fiend. "Tighten The Line" and "Soft", similarly lacks that overall polished sound and doesn’t deliver anything to evoke a reaction of surprise or shock. "Smiles and Pretences", possibly the best song on the album, touches on the classic AHC industrial sound. It’s has the recipe to be an amazing live song, with heavy pre-chorus guitars that plant the seeds for an almighty circle pit. "Trained" has been put well through production stages and sounds excellent, towards the end it really delivers with a fast instrumental jam and emits the essence of an album closing track. "One Big Female Neurosis" is excellently structured and sounds very original and does ponder the question of why it was never included. Covers of "Filth Pig" by Ministry and "Irresponsible Hate Anthem" by Marilyn Manson both feature as well however Manson’s track sounds best suited to the AHC sound with Heacock’s vocals spot on. The recording of "Pourn", one of the last tracks on the album, seems to be live and although it inst too clear sounds very industrially driven with an engrossing melodic chorus.

  • Only Way Out (4:13)
  • All Too Comfortable (4:33)
  • 17 (3:55)
  • Run away from me (3:55)
  • Real Life (3:53) - Released on the "Just So You Know" Single
  • Im Not Dead Yet (3:55)
  • Tighten The Line (4:14)
  • Soft (4:07)
  • Smiles And Pretenses (5:07) version 1
  • Trained (5:00)
  • One Big Female Neurosis (5:40)
  • Filth Pig (8:16) - Ministry Cover from "Devilswork: A Tribute To Ministry"
  • Pourn (2:44)
  • Irresponsible Hate Anthem (3:55) - Marylin Manson Cover from "Anthems Of Rust And Decay: A Tribute To Marylin Manson"

All That Remains


http://www.showandtellonline.com/images_splash/all_that_remains.jpg

All That Remains
is a metalcore band from Springfield, Massachusetts that formed in 1998. They have released three studio albums and are set to release their fourth - entitled Overcome - on September 16, 2008.

History

All That Remains released their debut album, Behind Silence and Solitude on March 26, 2002 through Prosthetic Records. The style of the album differs from their future releases, as it is void of clean vocals, and more prominently contains elements of melodic death metal. It was also the band's only release featuring guitarist Chris Bartlett and bassist Josh Stolowitz. Shortly after the album's release, singer Philip Labonte tried out for the vacant vocalist position in Killswitch Engage as mentioned in their DVD (Set This) World Ablaze. Labonte and Killswitch bassist Mike D'Antonio mentioned he was the runner-up, but current vocalist, Howard Jones got the position.

Their second album, This Darkened Heart was released on March 23, 2004 through Prosthetic Records. Produced by Killswitch Engage guitarist Adam Dutkiewicz, the album featured better production compared to its predecessor, as well as the use of clean vocals. Three singles were released from the album in "This Darkened Heart", "Tattered on My Sleeve" and "The Deepest Gray".

Their third album, The Fall of Ideals was released on July 11, 2006 through Prosthetic Records. Once again, the album was produced by Adam Dutkiewicz. The album is also considered to be the band's breakthrough release, as it entered the Billboard 200 charts at number 75, selling almost 13,000 copies in its first week. "This Calling" was released as the album's first single. Two music videos were created, with one incorporating footage from Saw III (as it was the lead song from the movie's soundtrack). A music video was made for the album's second single "The Air That I Breathe". The band were also a part of Ozzfest 2006. The song "Six" was featured in Guitar Hero II. On June 20, 2007, it was announced that The Fall of Ideals had surpassed 100,000 sales in the United States. A music video for the album's third single "Not Alone" was filmed on July 4 and was released on September 10, 2007.

In 2007, they played at Wacken Open Air in Wacken, Germany.

In early 2008, they embarked on a headlining tour with support from Chimaira & Black Tide with Divine Heresy & Light This City splitting the tour's opening slot. Five Finger Death Punch, was originally supposed to play but dropped off before the tour started due to Vocal problems.

They recently resided at Audiohammer Studios to record their latest album, entitled Overcome. Jason Suecof produced the album. It is the first record of the band not to be produced by Adam Dutkiewicz of Killswitch Engage. Currently, recording has finished, and the album awaits its release on September 16, 2008. In addition, All That Remains has posted two new songs entitled "Before the Damned" and "Relinquish" on their MySpace page.

Members

Current
  • Philip Labonte – vocals
  • Mike Martin – guitar
  • Oli Herbert – guitar
  • Jeanne Sagan – bass
  • Jason Costa – drums (ex-Diecast)
Former
  • Chris Bartlett – guitar
  • Matt Deis – bass (CKY)
  • Lance Schulze - vocals
  • Josh Venn – bass (She Is A Liar)
  • Mike Bartlett – drums
  • Colin "Beaulieu" Conway – drums (Live) (Frozen)
  • Shannon Lucas – drums (The Black Dahlia Murder)
  • Tim Yeung – drums (Live) (Divine Heresy, World Under Blood)

Discography

Studio albums

Date of Release Title Label US Billboard Peak US sales
March 26, 2002 Behind Silence and Solitude Prosthetic -
March 23, 2004 This Darkened Heart Prosthetic - 91,000
July 11, 2006 The Fall of Ideals Prosthetic 75 175,000
September 16, 2008 Overcome Prosthetic -

Singles

Year Song U.S. Modern Rock U.S. Mainstream Rock Album
2004 "The Deepest Gray" - - This Darkened Heart
"This Darkened Heart" - -
"Tattered on My Sleeve" - -
2006 "This Calling" - - The Fall of Ideals
"The Air That I Breathe" - -
2007 "Not Alone" - -
"Six" - -

Music videos

  1. "The Deepest Gray" (Video directed by: Ian McFarland)
  2. "This Darkened Heart" (Video directed by: Dale Resteghini)
  3. "Tattered on My Sleeve" (Video directed by: David Brodsky)
  4. "This Calling" (Video directed by: Frankie Nasso)
  5. "The Air That I Breathe" (Video directed by: Darren Doane)
  6. "Not Alone" (Video directed by: Soren Kragh-Jacobsen)

DVDs

  1. "All That Remains Live" A collection of two live concerts (one from Recher Theatre in Towson, MD and the other from the Trocadero in Philadelphia, PA), interviews with the band and fans, and behind the scenes footage from 2004 to date.

After Forever


http://www.melodic-metal.com/Bands/A/After%20Forever/band%20pic/111-%20afterforever.jpg

After Forever
is a symphonic metal band from the Netherlands. After Forever relies on the use of both soprano vocals and death grunts. Their music is also influenced by progressive metal and gothic metal.

Biography

After Forever was originally assembled in 1995 under the name Apocalypse, playing music most oriented towards death metal. With the joining of vocalist Floor Jansen in 1997, their style shifted slightly to a more gothic metal sound in order to give emphasis to her voice. Their line-up at this point comprised Floor Jansen, Mark Jansen, Sander Gommans, Luuk van Gerven, Jack Driessen and Joep Beckers.

In 1999 the band begun composing songs of their own and recorded two demos - entitled Ephemeral and Wings of Illusion - which eventually drew the attention of the Transmission Records label, with whom the band signed a contract.

Their debut album Prison of Desire was recorded in 2000, featuring the guest appearance of Sharon den Adel. The album obtained impressive success in Europe. In the end of that year, drummer André Borgman and keyboardist Lando van Gils joined the band, replacing Joep Beckers and Jack Driessen.

In 2001 the album Decipher was released. Floor Jansen was invited to guest sing in Ayreon, one of Arjen Anthony Lucassen's projects. In 2002 Mark Jansen quit After Forever and subsequently assembled the band Epica, being replaced by Bas Maas. In 2003 After Forever released the EP and DVD Exordium.

In 2004, the concept album Invisible Circles was released. It reached 26th place in the Dutch Top 100 musical chart. Lando van Gils also left the band and was replaced by Joost van den Broek in the same year.

In early September 2005, the band released their fourth album Remagine This album is available in two versions, an SACD with three bonus songs and as a ‘Special Edition’ with a DVD. The DVD contains a photo gallery and a 'making of' documentary.

On March 3, 2006, the band left the Transmission Records label, due to the scarce promotion that the label was providing. Following this, Transmission Records released the Mea Culpa compilation. By October of the same year After Forever had signed to Nuclear Blast Records.

In the end of 2006 the band recorded their 1st album on the Nuclear Blast label, self titled After Forever, it features guest appearances from Annihilator guitarist Jeff Waters and Doro Pesch. Videos of the recording sessions are available for download on the band website. The album was released in April 23, 2007.

In January 2008, After Forever announced on their website that the band would be taking a year's break from touring, due to Sander's medical condition.

Line-up

Floor Jansen during After Forever concert on Masters of Rock 2007 festival in Zlín.

Floor Jansen during After Forever concert on Masters of Rock 2007 festival in Zlín.
  • Floor Jansen - Vocals (1997-)
  • Sander Gommans - Guitar, grunts (1995-)
  • Bas Maas – Guitar, vocals (2002-)
  • Luuk van Gerven - Bass (1996-)
  • André Borgman - Drums (2000-)
  • Joost van den Broek - Keyboards (2004-)

Former members

  • Mark Jansen - Guitars, screams (1995-2002)
  • Joep Beckers - Drums (1995-2000)
  • Jack Driessen - Keyboards (1995-2000)
  • Lando van Gils - Keyboards (2000-2004)

Discography

Studio albums

  • Prison of Desire (2000)
  • Decipher (2001)
  • Invisible Circles (2004)
  • Remagine (2005)
  • After Forever (2007)

EPs and singles

  • Follow in the Cry (2000)
  • Emphasis/Who Wants To Live Forever (2002)
  • Monolith Of Doubt (2002)
  • Exordium (2003)
  • My Choice/The Evil That Men Do (2003)
  • Digital Deceit (2004)
  • Being Everyone (2005)
  • Two Sides/Boundaries Are Open (2006)
  • Energize Me (2007)
  • Equally Destructive (2007)

Demos

  • Ephemeral (1999)
  • Wings of Illusion (1999)

Compilations

  • Mea Culpa (2006)

Adema


http://www.poemhunter.com/i/lyrics/singers/15/3415_b_5874.jpg

Adema
is a 5-member nu metal band from Bakersfield, California.

History

Early years

Adema's first (self-titled) album was released in 2001 with Mark Chavez being the vocalist, Tim Fluckey and Mike Ransom playing guitar, Dave DeRoo' playing bass, and Kris Kohls playing Drums. Since then they've gone through numerous changes with their lineup and musical style.

Adema got its name from the medical term "edema," a kind of tissue swelling. According to Kohls: "A friend of the band who was actually working at a morgue for a while, he just mentioned the term one night and we thought it was cool so we used it with the different spelling."

A label bidding war led to the band signing with Arista, probably in part because of Chavez's relationship to Korn singer, Jonathan Davis (They are half-brothers). The band was signed by L.A. Reid, who is better known for signing R&B artists. The band then sequestered themselves in a cabin and wrote the material for their debut album.

Adema and success

The band’s eponymous debut, Adema, was released in August 2001 to moderate success. Its two major singles, "Giving In" and "The Way You Like It," received significant airplay on rock radio. All the lyrics were written by Chavez, and the album was produced by Bill Appleberry (7th House) and Tobi Miller (Wallflowers guitarist). It was certified Gold, and the band received a spot on the main stage during the Ozzfest tour. They kept playing live with the Music as a Weapon, SnoCore Rock, and Projekt Revolution tours.

In 2002, Adema released Insomniac's Dream, an EP, as a "gift to fans." The single from the album, "Immortal," was written for the video game Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance. Besides the single, it included a track from international versions of Adema, a tribute to Alice in Chains and four remixes of songs from Adema.

Unstable and turmoil

Adema's second album, Unstable, was released by Arista in August 2003. It was produced by Howard Benson, whose credits also include producing albums with P.O.D., Hoobastank and Cold.

The band has vigorously fought the label "nu metal," preferring to be classified as traditional rock. While Unstable was not a significant break from their earlier sound, Chavez compared it to the rawness of Nirvana, and bassist DeRoo hoped that Chavez’s stronger voice (the result of voice lessons) would result in a more mainstream sound. "We don't go onstage and nu metal," said drummer Kohls. "We're sick of that phrase. ROCK - it's such a broad word that it doesn't categorize you." The band would ultimately shed the label when they shed their "nu metal singer," Chavez.

As it turned out, the album was named "Unstable" for a reason: Chavez and guitarist Ransom had a bitter rivalry that ended when first Ransom, then Chavez, left the band. The rest of the band has blamed Chavez for "selfish" "personal problems" that held the band back musically. The feud with Ransom put the rest of the band in the middle. While DeRoo wouldn't comment specifically on what the supposed problems were, he insinuated that Chavez was caught up in drugs.

During 2003, when the band released and toured for Unstable, Chavez and Ransom didn’t speak to one another. The band claimed that the split was no surprise. Ransom left in September, while the remaining four members finished touring.

Amidst this conflict, Unstable sold over 66% less than the band's debut album. In December, the band learned that Arista was dropping them during a label merger. A large number of Arista's staff was fired in a management shakeup by its parent company, Sony. L.A. Reid, who originally signed the band, had left the label a week earlier. The band has blamed low sales of Unstable on being dropped.

The band continued to write, but in February 2004, Chavez started to lose interest. He quit the band in September. While the remaining three members remained on cordial, if not stellar, terms with Ransom, their attitude towards Chavez was much more hostile.

With regards to the split with Adema, Chavez acknowledged his "personal problems"(Drugs). But he claimed that "it takes two to tango," and that his decision precipitated from an argument with drummer Kohls over the direction of the band. Adema denied this, blaming the split on Chavez's disinterest in the band. Chavez would form the band Midnight Panic with his cousin and early Adema bandmates Cesareo Garasa and Mike Montano, which released the self-titled Midnight Panic EP before dissolving. He is currently working on a solo project.

Planets with Luke Caraccioli

The remaining three members regrouped to write new music and auditioned new singers. After Kohls heard a demo from Rewind Yesterday, another Bakersfield band, he was impressed by the group's lead singer, Luke Caraccioli. Adema asked Caraccioli to front the band. Caraccioli accepted a few months later in January 2005.

Adema signed to metal label Earache Records in Spring 2004 when its manager, Al Dawson, heard them at a show. Under their new label, the band gained more control over their direction than they had when signed with Arista. Adema lauded Earache for allowing "bands to express themselves creatively."

In April 2005, a year later, the band would deliver their next album, Planets produced by Nick Forcillo. They released the album's first single, "Tornado," that March.

Planets was, musically, a significant break from Adema's two earlier albums; it was much closer to rock than Adema's nu metal history. Kohls said that the band relied on influences from classic rock , and that the band proved that they were "so much more than" a nu metal band. The writing for the album was shared between the four members.

As an ex-marine, Caraccioli played his first show with Adema in the Persian Gulf in April 2005. They performed for American troops stationed in Iraq, Afghanistan, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates for the Armed Forces Entertainment. Though the Iraq War was still raging, the band stressed that the tour was apolitical. Adema then promoted the release by touring with Brides of Destruction, a band that Kohls had briefly been involved in. Though proud of their identity change, the band noted that they had a mixture of fans from both the "old" and "new" Ademas at live shows.

In September, Adema released a second single from the album, "Planets." The single was featured in the movie thriller Cry Wolf.

In October 2005, Luke Caraccioli left the band, citing personal reasons. Following Luke's departure, the band got in touch with Mark Chavez and according to the band, both parties are back on good terms. Both parties even had talks about Chavez singing for Adema again and even wrote some new songs together, but as of late nothing further transpired from these events.

Kill the Headlights with Bobby Reeves and Ed Faris

In March 2006, Adema announced a new vocalist, Bobby Reeves a former member of the band LEVEL. In August, the band recruited guitarist Ed Faris, also a former member of LEVEL. With their new lineup, the band signed onto Immortal Records in February 2007. They released Kill the Headlights, produced by Marshall Altman (Marc Broussard, Zebrahead) in August 2007. The first single, "Cold and Jaded," was released in July. Recently, according to Dave Deroo, the band has decided to go on a "hiatus" to regroup, take a break, and assured fans they have not broken up.

Band members

Current

  • Tim Fluckey – guitar
  • Dave DeRoo – bass
  • Kris Kohls – drums
  • Bobby Reeves – vocals (2006 - present)
  • Ed Faris – guitar, synths (2006 - present)

Former

  • Luke Caraccioli – vocals (2005)
  • Mark Chavez – vocals (2000 - 2004)
  • Mike Ransom – guitar (2000 - 2003)

Discography

Albums

Album US Release date Label Billboard 200 Sales (N.A. only)
Adema August 21, 2001 Arista Records 27 671,763 1 (Gold)
Unstable August 19, 2003 Arista Records 43 200,000+ 2
Planets April 5, 2005 Earache Records 152 60,000+ 3
Kill the Headlights August 21, 2007 Immortal Records N/A 2,000+ 4

EP

EP US Release date Label Billboard 200 Sales (N.A. only)
Insomniac's Dream (EP) November 20, 2002 Arista Records N/A 50,000

1Based on Nielsen SoundScan figures from September 2004.
2Based on Adema's official biography at Purevolume.
3Based on Nielsen SoundScan figures from April 12, 2005 (first week sales only).
60,000 sold according to official Rewind Yesterday site. http://www.aaeg.com/rewindyesterday/presskit.pdf

4Based on Nielsen SoundScan figures from August 26, 2007 (first week sales only).

Singles

Year Song U.S. Modern Rock U.S. Mainstream Rock Album
2001 Giving In * 14 16 Adema
2002 The Way You Like It * 15 21
Freaking Out 36 25
Immortal * Insomniac's Dream
2003 Unstable * 37 25 Unstable
Promises
2005 Tornado * Planets
Planets *
2007 Cold and Jaded Kill the Headlights

lundi 4 août 2008

AC/DC


http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1003/976560696_e750543a75.jpg

AC/DC
are a rock band formed in Sydney, Australia in 1973 by brothers Angus and Malcolm Young. Although the band are considered pioneers of hard rock and heavy metal, its members have always classified their music as "rock 'n' roll".

AC/DC underwent several line-up changes before releasing their first album, High Voltage, in 1975. Membership remained stable until bassist Cliff Williams replaced Mark Evans in 1977. In 1979, the band recorded their highly successful album Highway to Hell. Lead singer and co-songwriter Bon Scott died on February 19, 1980, after a night of heavy alcohol consumption. The group briefly considered disbanding, but soon ex-Geordie singer Brian Johnson was selected as Scott's replacement. Later that year, the band released their best selling album, Back in Black.

The band's next album, For Those About to Rock (We Salute You), was also highly successful and was their first album to reach number one in the United States. AC/DC declined in popularity soon after the departure of drummer Phil Rudd in 1983. Poor record sales continued until the release of The Razors Edge in 1990. Phil Rudd returned in 1994 and contributed to the band's 1995 album Ballbreaker. Stiff Upper Lip was released in 2000 and was well received by critics. A new album was announced in 2004 and is expected in late 2008.

AC/DC have sold more than 200 million albums worldwide, including 69 million albums in the US. Back in Black has sold an estimated 42 million units worldwide and 22 million in the US alone, making it the fifth highest-selling album ever in the US. AC/DC ranked fourth on VH1's list of the "100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock" and the seventh "Greatest Heavy Metal Band Of All Time" by MTV.

Name and background

Angus and Malcolm Young developed the idea for the band's name after older brother George Young's fiancee at the time saw the acronym "AC/DC" on the back of a sewing machine owned by their sister, Margaret Young. "AC/DC" is an abbreviation for "alternating current/direct current", which indicates that an electrical device can use either type of power. The brothers felt that this name symbolised the band's raw energy and power-driven performances, and love for music so the name stuck. In some cultures, "AC/DC" is a slang term for bisexuality; the band have said that they were not aware of this usage until it was brought to their attention by a taxi driver one night after a concert early in their career. "AC/DC" is pronounced one letter at a time, though the band is popularly known as "Acca Dacca" in Australia.

Brothers Angus, Malcolm, and George Young were born in Glasgow, Scotland, and moved to Sydney, Australia with most of their family in 1963. George was the first to learn to play the guitar. He became a member of The Easybeats, Australia's most successful band of the 1960s. In 1966, they became the first local rock act to have an international hit, with the song "Friday on My Mind". Malcolm followed in George's footsteps by playing with a Newcastle, New South Wales band called The Velvet Underground (not to be confused with the New York-based The Velvet Underground).

History

Early years: 1973–1977

In November 1973, Malcolm and Angus Young formed AC/DC and recruited bassist Larry Van Kriedt, vocalist Dave Evans, and Colin Burgess, ex-The Masters Apprentices drummer. The band played their first gig at a club named Chequers in Sydney on New Year's Eve, 1973. They were later signed to the EMI-distributed Albert Productions label for Australia and New Zealand. The early line-up of the band changed often; Colin Burgess was the first member fired, and several bassists and drummers passed through the band during the next year.

By this time, Angus Young had adopted his characteristic school uniform stage outfit. The original uniform was reputedly from his secondary school, Ashfield Boys High School in Sydney; the idea was his sister Margaret's. Angus had tried other costumes, such as Spider-Man, Zorro, a gorilla, and a parody of Superman, named Super-Ang. In fact in its early days, most members of the band dressed in some form of glam or satin outfit but this approach was abandoned when it was discovered Melbourne band Skyhooks had already adopted this approach to their stage presentation.

The Young brothers decided that Evans was not a suitable frontman for the group, because they felt he was more of a glam rocker like Gary Glitter. On stage, Evans was occasionally replaced by the band's first manager, Dennis Laughlin, who was the original lead singer with Sherbet prior to Daryl Braithwaite joining the band. Evans had interpersonal problems with Laughlin, which also contributed to the band's ill feeling toward Evans. Meanwhile Ronald Belford "Bon" Scott, an experienced vocalist and friend of George Young's, was interested in becoming their vocalist.

In September 1974, Bon Scott replaced Dave Evans. The band had recorded only one single with Evans, "Can I Sit Next to You" / "Rockin' in the Parlour", and "Can I Sit Next to You" was eventually re-recorded with Bon Scott under the title "Can I Sit Next to You Girl".

By January 1975, the Australia-only album High Voltage had been recorded.It was the second album to Jailbreak. It took only ten days and was based on instrumental songs written by the Young brothers, with lyrics added by Scott. Within a few months, the band's line-up had stabilised, featuring Scott, the Young brothers, bassist Mark Evans and drummer Phil Rudd. Later that year they released the single "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)", which became their perennial rock anthem. It was included on their second album, T.N.T., which was also released only in Australia and New Zealand. The album featured another classic song, "High Voltage".

Between 1974 and 1977, aided by regular appearances on Molly Meldrum's Countdown, a nationally broadcast pop music television show, AC/DC became one of the most popular and successful acts in Australia. Their performance on 3 April 1977 was their last live TV appearance for over twenty years.

International success: 1977–1980

In 1976, the band signed an international deal with Atlantic Records, and toured extensively throughout Europe. They gained invaluable experience of the stadium circuit, supporting leading hard rock acts such as Aerosmith, Kiss, Styx and Blue Öyster Cult, and co-headlined with Cheap Trick.

The first AC/DC album to gain worldwide distribution was a 1976 compilation of tracks taken from the High Voltage and T.N.T. LPs. Also titled High Voltage, and released on the Atlantic Records label, the album sold three million copies worldwide, partly due to its popularity with a British punk audience. The track selection was heavily weighted toward the more recent T.N.T., and included only two songs from their first LP. The band's next album, Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap, was released in the same year in both Australian-only and international versions, like its predecessor. Track listings varied worldwide, and the international version of the album also featured "Rocker" from T.N.T. The original Australian version included "Jailbreak" (now more readily available on the 1984 compilation EP '74 Jailbreak or as a live version on the 1992 Live album). Dirty Deeds was not released in the US until 1981, by which time the band were at the peak of their popularity.

Following the 1977 recording Let There Be Rock, bassist Mark Evans was sacked due to personal differences with Angus Young. He was replaced by Cliff Williams, who also provided backing vocals alongside Malcolm Young. Neither of the Young brothers has elaborated on the departure of Evans, though Richard Griffiths, the CEO of Epic Records and a booking agent for AC/DC in the mid-1970s, later commented, "You knew Mark wasn't going to last, he was just too much of a nice guy."

AC/DC were a formative influence on New Wave of British Heavy Metal bands who emerged in the late 1970s, such as Saxon and Iron Maiden, in part as a reaction to the decline of traditional early 1970s heavy metal bands. In 2007, critics noted that AC/DC, along with Thin Lizzy, UFO, Scorpions and Judas Priest, were among "the second generation of rising stars ready to step into the breach as the old guard waned."

AC/DC's first American exposure was through the Michigan radio station AM 600 WTAC in 1977. The station's manager, Peter C. Cavanaugh, booked the band to play at Flint's Capitol Theater. The supporting act was MC5, who had just briefly reunited and agreed to play at the event. The band opened with their popular song "Live Wire" and closed with "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)".

AC/DC came to be identified with the punk rock movement by the British press. Their reputation, however, managed to survive the punk upheavals of the late 1970s, and they maintained a cult following in the UK throughout this time. Angus Young gained notoriety for mooning the audience during live performances.

The 1978 release of Powerage marked the debut of bassist Cliff Williams, and with its harder riffs, followed the blueprint set by Let There Be Rock. Only one single was released for Powerage, "Rock 'n' Roll Damnation" and gave AC/DC the highest mark at the time, reaching #24. An appearance at the Apollo Theatre in Glasgow during the Powerage tour was recorded and released as If You Want Blood You've Got It, featuring such songs as "Whole Lotta Rosie", "Problem Child", and "Let There Be Rock", as well as lesser-known album tracks like "Riff Raff". The album was the last produced by Harry Vanda and George Young with Bon Scott on vocals (although Vanda and Young later produced Blow Up Your Video) and is claimed to be AC/DC's most underrated album.

The band's sixth album, Highway to Hell, was produced by Robert Lange and released in 1979. It became the first AC/DC LP to break into the US top 100, eventually reaching , and it propelled AC/DC into the top ranks of hard rock acts. Highway to Hell put increased emphasis on backing vocals but still featured AC/DC's signature sound: loud, simple, pounding riffs and grooving backbeats. The final track, "Night Prowler", has two breaths in quick succession at the start of the song, intended to create a tone of fear and loathing.

Scott's death: 1980

On February 19, 1980, Bon Scott passed out after a night of heavy drinking in London, and was left in a car owned by an acquaintance named Alistair Kinnear. The following morning, Kinnear rushed him to King's College Hospital in Camberwell, where Scott was pronounced dead on arrival. Although common folklore claims that pulmonary aspiration of vomit was the cause of Scott's death, the official cause was listed as "acute alcohol poisoning" and "death by misadventure". Scott's family buried him in Fremantle, Western Australia, the area to which they had emigrated when he was a child.

Inconsistencies in the official accounts of Scott's death have been cited in conspiracy theories, which suggest that Scott died of a heroin overdose, or was killed by exhaust fumes redirected into the car, or that Kinnear did not exist. Additionally, Scott was asthmatic, and the temperature was below freezing on the morning of his death.

Brian Johnson's arrival and height of fame: 1980–1984

Following Scott's death, the band briefly considered quitting; they eventually concluded, however, that Scott would have wanted AC/DC to continue, and various candidates were considered for his replacement including Buzz Shearman, ex-Moxy member, who was not able to join due to vocal problems, and ex-Back Street Crawler vocalist Terry Slesser, who turned down this opportunity when he decided not to join an established band and instead started a solo career. The remaining AC/DC members finally decided on ex-Geordie singer Brian Johnson.

Angus Young later recalled, "I remember Bon playing me Little Richard, and then telling me the story of when he saw Brian singing." He says about that night, "There's this guy up there screaming at the top of his lungs and then the next thing you know he hits the deck. He's on the floor, rolling around and screaming. I thought it was great, and then to top it off—you couldn't get a better encore—they came in and wheeled the guy off!'" Later that night, Johnson would be diagnosed with appendicitis, which was the cause of his writhing around on stage.

For the audition, Johnson sang "Whole Lotta Rosie" from Let There Be Rock, and Ike & Tina Turner's "Nutbush City Limits". He was hired a few days after the audition.

With Brian Johnson the band completed the songwriting that they had begun with Bon Scott for the album Back in Black. Recording took place at Compass Point Studios in the Bahamas a few months after Scott's death. Back in Black, produced by Mutt Lange and recorded by Tony Platt, became their biggest-selling album and a hard-rock landmark; hits include "Hells Bells", "You Shook Me All Night Long", and the title track "Back in Black". The album was certified platinum a year after its release,[22] and by 2006 it had sold more than 22 million copies in the United States. The album reached in the UK and in the US, where it spent 131 weeks in the top ten, making it the fifth highest-selling album ever in the US.

The follow-up album, 1981's For Those About to Rock We Salute You, also sold well and was positively received by critics. The album featured two of the band's most popular singles: "Let's Get It Up" and the title track, "For Those About to Rock", which reached and in the UK, respectively. The band split with Lange for their self-produced 1983 album, Flick of the Switch, in an effort to recover the rawness and simplicity of their early albums.

Departure of Rudd and commercial decline: 1984–1987

Amid rumours of alcoholism and drug-induced paranoia, drummer Phil Rudd's friendship with Malcolm Young deteriorated and, after a long period of unfriendliness, the men's dislike for each other grew so strong that they fought. Rudd was fired two hours after the fight. Although Rudd had finished most of the drum tracks for their next album, he was replaced by Simon Wright after the band held an anonymous audition.

With the new line-up, the band released a less successful album, the self-produced Flick of the Switch, which was considered underdeveloped and unmemorable. One critic stated that the band "had made the same album nine times". AC/DC was voted the eighth-biggest disappointment of the year in the 1984 Kerrang! readers' poll. However, Flick of the Switch eventually reached on the UK charts, and AC/DC had minor success with the singles "Nervous Shakedown" and "Flick of the Switch". Fly on the Wall, produced by the Young brothers in 1985, was also regarded as uninspired and directionless. A music concept video of the same name featured the band at a bar, playing five of the album's ten songs.

In 1986, the group returned to the charts with the made-for-radio "Who Made Who". The album Who Made Who was the soundtrack to Stephen King's film Maximum Overdrive, and is the closest the band has come to releasing a "greatest hits" collection, which AC/DC have always refused to do. It brought together older hits, such as "You Shook Me All Night Long" and "Ride On", with newer songs such as title track "Who Made Who", and two new instrumentals, "D.T." and "Chase the Ace".

In February 1988, AC/DC were inducted into the Australian Recording Industry Association's Hall of Fame.

Renewed popularity: 1987–2000

AC/DC's 1988 album, Blow Up Your Video, was recorded at Miraval Studio in Le Val, France, and reunited the band with their original producers, Harry Vanda and George Young. The group recorded nineteen songs, choosing ten for the final release; though the album was later criticised for containing excessive "filler", it was a commercial success. Blow Up Your Video sold more copies than the previous two studio releases combined, and reached on the UK charts—AC/DC's highest position since Back in Black in 1980. The album featured the UK top-twenty single "Heatseeker", and popular songs such as "That's the Way I Wanna Rock and Roll". The Blow Up Your Video World Tour began in February 1988, in Perth, Australia. That April, following live appearances across Europe, Malcolm Young announced that he was taking time off from touring, principally to begin recovery from his alcoholism. Another member of the Young family, Stevie Young, temporarily took Malcolm's place.

Following the tour, Wright left the group to work on the upcoming Dio album Lock Up the Wolves, and was replaced by session veteran Chris Slade. Johnson was unavailable for several months while finalising his divorce, so the Young brothers wrote all the songs for the next album, a practice they have continued for all subsequent releases. The new album, The Razors Edge, was produced by Bruce Fairbairn, who had previously worked with Aerosmith and Bon Jovi. Released in 1990, it was a major comeback for the band, and included the hits "Thunderstruck" and "Are You Ready", which reached #5 and #16 respectively on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Tracks Chart, and "Moneytalks", which peaked at on the Billboard Hot 100. The album went multi-platinum and reached the US top ten. Several shows on the Razors Edge tour were recorded as footage for the 1992 live album, entitled Live. Live was produced by Fairbairn, and is considered one of the best live albums of the 1990s. A year later, AC/DC recorded "Big Gun" for the soundtrack of the Arnold Schwarzenegger movie Last Action Hero, and was released as a single, reaching on the US Mainstream Rock chart, the band's first single on that chart.

In 1994, Angus and Malcolm invited Rudd to several jam sessions. He was eventually rehired to replace Slade, whose amicable departure arose in part due to the band's strong desire to again work with Rudd. In 1995, with the 1980—83 line-up back together, the group released Ballbreaker, recorded at the Ocean Way Studios in Los Angeles, California, and produced by Rick Rubin. The first single from the album was "Hard as a Rock". Two more singles were released from the album: "Hail Caesar" and "Cover You in Oil".

In 1997, a box set named Bonfire was released. It contained four albums; a remastered version of Back in Black; Volts (a disc with alternate takes, outtakes, and stray live cuts) and two live albums, Live from the Atlantic Studios and Let There Be Rock: The Movie. Live from the Atlantic Studios was recorded in 1978 at the Atlantic Studios in New York. Let There Be Rock: The Movie was a double album recorded in 1979 at The Pavillon in Paris, and was the soundtrack of a motion picture, AC/DC: Let There Be Rock. The US version of the box set included a colour booklet, a two-sided poster, a sticker, a temporary tattoo, a keychain bottle opener, and a guitar pick.

Recent events: 2000–2008

In 2000, the band released their fourteenth studio album, Stiff Upper Lip, produced by George Young. The album was better received by critics than Ballbreaker, but was considered lacking in new ideas. The Australian release included a bonus disc with three promotional videos and several live performances recorded in Madrid in 1996. Stiff Upper Lip reached in five countries, including Argentina and Germany; in three countries, Spain, France and Switzerland; in Australia; in Canada and Portugal; and in Norway, the US and Hungary. The first single, "Stiff Upper Lip", remained at on the US Mainstream Rock charts for four weeks. The other singles released also did very well; "Safe in New York City" and "Satellite Blues" reached and on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Tracks, respectively.

In 2002, AC/DC signed a long-term, multi-album deal with Sony Music, who went on to release a series of remastered albums as part of their AC/DC remasters series. Each release contained an expanded booklet, featuring rare photographs, memorabilia, and notes. In 2003, the entire back-catalogue (except Ballbreaker and Stiff Upper Lip) was remastered and re-released. Ballbreaker was eventually re-released in October 2005; Stiff Upper Lip was later rereleased in April 2007.

On July 30, 2003 the band performed with The Rolling Stones and Rush at Molson Canadian Rocks for Toronto. The concert, held before an audience of half a million, was intended to help the city overcome the negative publicity stemming from the effects of a 2003 severe acute respiratory syndrome epidemic. The concert holds the record for the largest paid music event in North American history. The band came second in a list of Australia's highest-earning entertainers for 2005, and sixth for 2006, despite having neither toured since 2003 nor released an album since 2000. Verizon Wireless has gained the rights to release AC/DC's full albums and the entire Live at Donington concert to download in 2008.

On October 16, 2007, Columbia Records released a double and triple DVD titled Plug Me In. The set consists of 5 and 7 hours of rare footage, and even a recording of AC/DC at a high school performing "School Days", "T.N.T.", "She's Got Balls", and "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)". As with Family Jewels, disc one contains rare shows of the band with Bon Scott, and disc two is about the Brian Johnson era. The collector's edition contains an extra DVD with 21 more rare performances of both Scott and Johnson and more interviews.

AC/DC will make their music rhythm video game debut with Rock Band 2 as "Let There Be Rock" was announced to be playable on the game's setlist at E3.

New album: 2008

As of January 2006, AC/DC have been working on a new studio album. According to Malcolm Young, "The band are currently writing and recording material for the eagerly anticipated next album, but no release date has been set." In a 2004 interview, Brian Johnson revealed that for the first time since the 1988 album Blow Up Your Video, he would be handling lyrics. He also said that Angus Young has written harder riffs than those on Stiff Upper Lip. In 2005, Johnson confirmed that the band did not know when the album will be recorded, or who would produce it and Malcolm Young said that the new album has "gotta be perfect". Johnson and Williams, along with Steve Luongo and Mark Hitt, recorded new songs for a fund-raising tour named "Classic Rock Cares", and the new songs were to be presented during concerts. So far, three new songs, "Chain Gang on the Road," "Blood Alley," and "Who Phoned The Law?" have been played live. Williams stated that "the Young brothers have been writing new material, but there’s no telling when that will crystallise into an album." In March, 2008, several websites claimed that AC/DC were spotted in Vancouver, where the band recorded their last two studio albums with Vancouver engineer and mixer Mike Fraser. Fraser has engineered previous AC/DC Vancouver sessions, leading metalunderground.com to speculate that he is working on the new album.

In April 2008, AC/DC's official website confirmed the release of the new album with producer Brendan O'Brien and audio engineer Mike Fraser. Johnson recently revealed during an interview with Washington D.C.'s DC 101 radio station that AC/DC have finished recording the new album and are currently mixing it for a late 2008 release.

On June 9, 2008, The Wall Street Journal reported that the band's new album would be sold exclusively through WalMart stores in the United States. "Veteran rockers AC/DC are set to become the next major band to sell a new album only through Wal-Mart Stores Inc., according to people familiar with the matter." In a follow-up report, Reuters reported the album was expected to be released in the Northern Fall (Sep-Nov) of 2008.

Reports are that the new album will be titled "Black Ice" and will be released on October 27th 2008 with the first single titled "Runaway Train" or "Rock 'n' Roll Train" being released in late August 2008. The album will be followed by a world tour starting in October 2008 according to Rob Light a Creative Artists Agency managing partner.

Recognition

The street sign for ACDC Lane, Melbourne.

The street sign for ACDC Lane, Melbourne.

AC/DC were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in March 2003. During the ceremony the band performed "Highway to Hell" and "You Shook Me All Night Long", with guest vocals provided by host Steven Tyler of Aerosmith. He described the band's power chords as "the thunder from down under that gives you the second-most-powerful surge that can flow through your body." During the acceptance speech, Brian Johnson quoted their 1977 song "Let There Be Rock".

In May 2003, Malcolm Young accepted a Ted Albert Award for Outstanding Service to Australian Music at the 2003 Music Winners Awards, during which he paid special tribute to Bon Scott.

On October 1, 2004, a central Melbourne thoroughfare, Corporation Lane, was renamed in honour of the band. However, the City of Melbourne forbade the use of the slash character in street names, so the four letters were combined. The lane is near Swanston Street where, on the back of a truck, the band recorded their video for the 1975 hit "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)". Additionally, a street in Leganés, Spain was named "Calle de AC/DC" on March 2, 2000.

In 2005, the Recording Industry Association of America upgraded the group's US sales figures from 63 million to 69 million, making AC/DC the fifth-best-selling band in US history and the tenth best selling artist, selling more albums than Madonna, Maria Carey and Michael Jackson, just to name a few.[6] The RIAA also certified Back in Black as double Diamond (twenty million) in US sales, and by 2007 the album had sold 22 million copies, which moved it into fifth place.

Band members

Main article: List of AC/DC members
  • Brian Johnson – lead vocals (1980–present)
  • Angus Young – lead guitar (1973–present)
  • Malcolm Young – rhythm guitar, backing vocals (1973–present)
  • Cliff Williams – bass guitar, backing vocals (1977–present)
  • Phil Rudd – drums, percussion (1975–1983, 1994–present)

Former members

  • Dave Evans – lead vocals (1973–1974)
  • Mark Evans – bass guitar (1975–1977)
  • Bon Scott – lead vocals (1974–1980)
  • Simon Wright – drums, percussion (1983–1989)
  • Chris Slade – drums, percussion (1989–1994)

Discography

Main article: AC/DC discography
  • High Voltage (1975)
  • Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap (1976)
  • Let There Be Rock (1977)
  • Powerage (1978)
  • Highway to Hell (1979)
  • Back in Black (1980)
  • For Those About to Rock We Salute You (1981)
  • Flick of the Switch (1983)
  • Fly on the Wall (1985)
  • Who Made Who (1986)
  • Blow Up Your Video (1988)
  • The Razors Edge (1990)
  • Ballbreaker (1995)
  • Stiff Upper Lip (2000)
  • AC/DC's fifteenth studio album (2008)