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Leave a Comment | Posted by Jolene on October 27, 2011

Is Sammy drunk or high? Maybe he jast has a case of the Gene Simmons’s?

SAMMY HAGAR: Obviously Drank Too Much Tequila

Has Sammy Hagar gone mad? He’s says he’d like to reunite the original Guns n’ Roses and manage them.

“The amount of money they could make if they got it all back together, made a great record and toured the world would probably be as much as The Rolling Stones [get]… I’d be their manager and make sure they got the right deal from all the promoters. They could be the biggest band in the world if they wanted to.”

Hagar knows a thing or two about dysfunctional bands, having been part of Van Halen, who he says he can’t work with unless Eddie Van Halen changes. VH and GNR do have something in common — Irving Azoff manages Van Halen and also managed the latest Guns lineup.

Have a killer night!
Jolene

Leave a Comment | Posted by Jolene on October 26, 2011

10/26/2011

We all love to debate songs till were blue in the face around here. But is Time magazine the authority on this? Remember when Time threw Eddie Vedder on the cover after both he and Kurt declined the interveiw. Anyhow…..I’ve run us off the rails!! Check out the list and tell me what songs you think should be in for each decade.

Jolene

SPRINGSTEEN, ZEPPELIN, WHO, R.E.M.: Down With Time

Time magazine has published another one of those music lists designed to get people arguing. The latest is the All-Time 100 Songs, from 1923 (when the magazine began) until 2010. The list is not in any particular order, expect broken down by decade. Here are the rock songs that made the cut, by decade.

2000s
Arcade Fire – “Wake Up”
LCD Soundsystem – “All My Friends”

1990s
Nirvana – “Smells Like Teen Spirit”
Richard Thompson – “1952 Vincent Black Lightning”
Radiohead – “Paranoid Android”

1980s
Joy Division – “Love Will Tear Us Apart”
New Order – “Blue Monday”
Metallica – “Master of Puppets”
R.E.M. – “It’s the End of the World as We Know It”
Lucinda Williams – “Pineola”

1970s
Led Zeppelin – “Immigrant Song”
Black Sabbath – “Iron Man”
Joni Mitchell – A Case of You”
The Who – “Baba O’ Riley”
Stevie Wonder – “Superstition”
Big Star – “September Gurls”
Bonnie Raitt – “Angel From Montgomery”
Bruce Springsteen – “Thunder Road”

Comments (1) | Posted by Jolene on October 25, 2011

Sit N Spin……Holiday Weiland style!

Scott Weiland To Release Christmas Album

It’s a little early to be talking about Christmas, isn’t it? Wait, Scott Weiland??? The Stone Temple Pilots / Velvet Revolver frontman?

Yes, it’s true. Coming out next Tuesday is a X-Mas album of Scott Weiland crooning his way through 10 classics, such as “I’ll Be Home For Christmas,” “Silent Night,” “Sex Type Thing,” and “Winter Wonderland.” Okay, I’m kidding about one of those songs, but not about the album.

Scott Weiland’s Christmas album, It’s The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year, is available online and in stores today on Rhino Records.

Scott Weiland: It’s The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year

1. The Christmas Song

2. I’ll Be Home For Christmas

3. White Christmas

4. Silent Night

5. It’s The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year

6. What Child Is This?

7. Winter Wonderland

8. Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas

9. Happy Christmas And Many More

10. O Holy Night

Alright thanks for another fun filled edtion of Sit N Spin!

Jolene

Leave a Comment | Posted by Iron Mike on

Just a quick reminder of the big show this Saturday at the WaMu Theater in Seattle!

KISW, AEG Live, & Showbox present: The Epitaph Tour: Judas Priest with Black Label Society, Thin Lizzy, and Lady Starlight

Sat, Oct 29, 2011 – Showtime: 6:00 PM – Doors open: 5:00 PM All Ages
Buy tickets here: http://wamutheater.com/eventdetail.php?id=32391

Leave a Comment | Posted by Ryan Castle on

Pumpkiiiiiiinnnnnn….

Leave a Comment | Posted by Jolene on October 24, 2011

Ahh Danko Jones!

So I’ve been a big fan of Danko Jones for a good number of years now. I found this piece interesting as I read the tweet that stemmed this article Sunday am.

DANKO JONES Selling His METALLICA Collection After Hearing ‘Lulu’ Album – Oct. 24, 2011
Canadian rocker Danko Jones has slammed METALLICA’s collaboration with Lou Reed, claiming to have put his entire METALLICA collection up for sale after hearing the controversial “Lulu” project.

“Lulu” is due on November 1 in North America via Warner Bros. Records and one day earlier (October 31) in the rest of the world through Universal Music. The CD, which is available for streaming in its entirety at LouReedMetallica.com, was co-produced by Reed, METALLICA, Hal Willner — who has produced albums for Reed, Marianne Faithfull, and Laurie Anderson, among others — and Greg Fidelman. Fidelman also mixed the record.

In a series of tweets over the weekend, Danko offered his opinion on “Lulu”, calling it the “Ishtar”, “Waterworld” and “Battlefield Earth” of rock ‘n’ roll. (“Ishtar”, “Waterworld” and “Battlefield Earth” are widely considered to be three of the biggest cinematic train wrecks.) His final tweet on the subject reads, “Good morning! Heard METALLICA/Lou Reed album last night. METALLICA collection now for sale. Tweet your $$$.”

“Lulu” finds METALLICA playing behind lyrics written and sung by Reed that are based on a pair of early 20th century German Expressionist plays.

METALLICA guitarist Kirk Hammett told Revolver in a new interview that “Lulu” is “one of the best things we’ve ever done,” adding, “We haven’t been spontaneous like that for years and years and years, probably since the ’80s.”

Hammett added that fans should not consider this the next METALLICA album, saying, “All I have to say is don’t judge it by heavy metal standards and maybe you’ll understand it better.”

Reaction worldwide to the samples of music heard from the project so far has been a mix of confusion, hostility and disappointment, with fans cautiously lauding METALLICA for daring to experiment but also saying that this project was perhaps the wrong combination of artists.

Hmmm, I’m still a fan of Danko Jones and yes, Metallica too.

Cheers,
Jolene

Leave a Comment | Posted by Iron Mike on

Did ya miss the sold out throw-back 80s rock Key Arena concert of Night Ranger/Foreigner/Journey last Friday night? No worries got your back. Here’s some video and couple photos (more Journey shots will be posted in KISW photo gallery soon: http://www.kisw.com/pages/10419890.php) I did at the show. Did you know Journey’s drummer Deen Castronovo hails from the Northwest? This Oregon native was a drumming staple in the Seattle 80s Metal scene with Portland’s Metal Madmen the Wild Dogs! From there he’s gone off to play with everyone from Ozzy to his current 13 year stint with Journey! Watch his drum solo..WOW!! Latest singer Arnel Pineda is a dead ringer Steve Perry! Awesome and lively onstage! Neil Schon…blew my socks off how good his guitar playing is! Even though the band is known for it’s softer lovey hits they still rock the house especially with the metal drumming injection of Deen Castronovo to the mix! Oh did I mention the openers Foreigner might of stole the show without one original band member onstage? Ha! Hard to believe how many killer hits they had in the day. Watch the videos below! Check out Journey online: http://www.journeymusic.com

Leave a Comment | Posted by Iron Mike on October 21, 2011

New footage surfaced showing how far The Beatles were ahead of their time!!! Unreal! Now click and have a good laugh on Friday!

Leave a Comment | Posted by Jolene on October 19, 2011

10/19/2011

Hell no Hole won’t open!!!

HOLE, LIMP BIZKIT: We Swear, This Story Isn’t From 1999

Courtney Love has pulled Hole out of Australia’s 2012 Soundwave Festival after discovering she would be below Limp Bizkit on the bill. Love voiced her displeasure to promoter AJ Maddah, tweeting, “What bloody flight of crazed fancy made you think we’d open for Limp Bizkit, dude? No offense, that’s nuts.” Maddah was not happy about Hole’s pull out and tweeted, “Like we were going to ask her permission every time we book a band. No point taking her back, only for her to cancel later, or turn up and act like a rotten [person] to other artists and fans.” –

If this was 1999 (thank god it’s not!) Both of said artists careers would be in much better places!

Cheers,
Jolene

Comments (1) | Posted by Jolene on October 18, 2011

10/18/2011

Sit N Spin!

The Top 10 Prog Rock Bands Of All Time……according to Rolling Stone’s poll.

10. DREAM THEATER Three years ago, Dream Theater released a compilation entitled Greatest Hit (…And 21 Other Pretty Cool Songs). The title refers to the band’s 1992 single “Pull Me Under,” which hit Number 10 on the Mainstream Rock Track chart that year and actually received some airplay. For a prog rock band – especially one that started in the mid-1980s– that’s an amazing feat. They never repeated it, but the band’s army of fans couldn’t care less. They probably even prefer it that way. Led by guitar god John Petrucci, Dream Theater play to gigantic crowds that regard them as the only band that matters. Beloved drummer Mike Portnoy left the band in 2010, but the band soldiered on and are releasing a new LP in September.

9. MARS VOLTA For some rock fans, prog rock started in the late 1960s with King Crimson and ended in the early 1980s when Yes, Genesis and Rush all started scoring massive radio hits with short, poppy songs. While the genre certainly peaked in popularity during that time, the genre has never really gone away – or stopped evolving. The Mars Volta may not be “prog” in the ultra-strict Tales From Topographic Oceans sense of the word, but it’s impossible to listen to the Omar Rodriquez-Lopez-led band and not hear just how much the genre has influenced them – or the length of their songs. They are also one of the few prog bands with an extremely young audience, who probably wouldn’t know a Robert Fripp if he fell on them.

8. TOOL If Mars Volta defines prog rock for the last decade, Tool defines 1990s prog. The group probably can be more accurately defined as prog-metal, and they retain a gigantic cult following despite their minimal output. The group has been together for 21 years, but in that time they’ve only released four LPs. They don’t have anything that even resembles a hit single, but they pack arenas and headline festivals every time they hit the road. The band toured last year and were talking about a new LP, but the group’s leader Maynard Kennean is devoting much of this year to his side project A Perfect Circle.

7. EMERSON, LAKE AND PALMER Emerson, Lake and Palmer get a bad rap. Some critics (particularly punk rock fans) say their name makes them sound more like a law firm than a rock band, and that they signified everything wrong with the bloated arena rock of the late 1970s. People say they single-handedly inspired the punk revolution. That’s an awful lot to pin on a single rock group, and even if that’s true – it’s quite the accomplishment. Haters aside, it’s hard to deny songs like “Lucky Man,” “Karn Evil 9″ and their rendition of “Fanfare For The Common Man.” The group began as a prog-rock supergroup featuring members of the Nice (Emerson), King Crimson (Lake) and Atomic Rooster (Palmer). They merged classical music with prog and were packing arenas by the mid-1970s, but times changed and they quickly grew to despise one another. There have been periodic reunions over the years, and just last year they played a one-off gig.

6. YES Yes is the longest running soap opera in prog rock history. Alliances within the band are constantly shifting and members come and go in what seems like a revolving door. At the center is bassist Chris Squire, the only man to appear in every incarnation of the band – though even he wasn’t a part of the late Eighties Yes splinter group Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe. It’s all very convoluted. Anyway, it’s beyond dispute that the group’s early Seventies output stands out as some of the greatest moments in prog history – particularly 1972’s Close To The Edge and 1971’s Fragile. They had a huge comeback in 1983 with “Owner Of A Lonely Heart,” but since then it’s been mostly downhill. In recent years, they replaced original lead singer Jon Anderson with the frontman of a Yes cover band. He now tours with former Yes keyboardist Rick Wakeman. It’s almost too complicated to fully explain or even understand. Just put on “Close To The Edge” and transport yourself back to a simpler time.

5. KING CRIMSON The big bang of prog rock was King Crimson’s 1969 debut LP In the Court of the Crimson King. Months after the record was released, the original line-up dissolved and Crimson has existed in countless permutations ever since. The only constant member is Robert Fripp, though he seems to have lost interest in the band and they haven’t played in a few years. “As long as I felt it necessary for KC music to enter the world, I was prepared to take on pretty much whatever nonsense came with it,” Fripp wrote in a December 2010 diary entry. “Today, there are greater necessities for me than pulling new KC music from the air & touring the world to present it to ears that would rather hear an older repertoire (which is pretty fab, may we note). Live KC music of any period would have value, but I doubt it would shape the contemporary musical debate. A grief of expectations, conventionality, conflicting demands – a younger Fripp would have dealt with it, and suffered. An older Fripp chooses his suffering more carefully.” Hey Robert, here’s an idea – reunite the original line-up for one final concert. If you’re sick of the band, bring the whole thing full circle and then pull the plug.

4. JETHRO TULL In the early 19th century, Jethro Tull invented the seed-drill, effectively giving birth to modern agriculture. About 270 years later, a British band named Jethro Tull released Aqualung, effectively giving birth to flute-driven prog rock as a commercial juggernaut. They never released an album as successful, but it’s not for lack of trying. The band has 23 albums under their belt, and they tour constantly. Their 1987 LP Crest of a Knave won the Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock/Metal Performance Vocal or Instrumental, beating out Metallica’s …And Justice For All. Jethro Tull have endured a lot of mockery for this, but clearly the Grammys are the villains of this story. The Tull had no anti-Metallica agenda, and they didn’t select their Grammy category. Leave them alone.

3. GENESIS Genesis break many rules of rock & roll. Bands aren’t supposed to get more and more popular as as the decades go by. They aren’t supposed to sell more records after their ultra-charismatic frontman leaves for a solo career. The drummer isn’t supposed to effortlessly take over as singer. But Genesis are trailblazers. The early records from their Peter Gabriel days – like Foxtrot and The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway – give them endless credibility in prog community. By the 1980s, Phil Collins had taken over and they were churning out pop songs like “Illegal Alien” and “In Too Deep.” They were also headlining stadiums all over the world. It was a weird time. Phil quit after the 1992 We Can’t Dance Tour, and replacement singer Ray Wilson never connected with audiences. The Phil Collins line-up toured in 2007, but Peter Gabriel stubbornly refuses to commit to a tour. In 2005, he called a band meeting and almost agreed to a reunion – but he got cold feet. It’s very, very frustrating for the massive Genesis fan community.

2. PINK FLOYD You gotta hand it to Bob Geldof. By 2005 it seemed impossible to imagine the classic line-up of Pink Floyd ever standing on the same stage. It had been 24 years since Roger Waters had shared a stage with David Gilmour. In that time, there were lawsuits over the name rights, endless squabbles in the press and seemingly no chance of a reunion. Geldof can be convincing, and after much back and forth he got the four men to agree to it. Their four-song set was absolutely glorious, and just three years later keyboardist Richard Wright died – forever ruling out a full reunion. You hear that, Peter Gabriel? If you wait too long, it becomes too late.

1. RUSH Well, this poll wasn’t even close. Rush won in a landslide – but this couldn’t come as any surprise. The Canadian trio have perhaps the most intense and enthusiastic fan community in all of rock. The band deserves such commitment. While most of their peers have fallen apart due to greed or laziness, Rush has maintained the same line-up since 1975 and their concerts are as spellbinding as they ever were. It’s also beyond dispute that Neil Peart is the greatest drummer on the planet. They just wrapped up an epic tour where they played Moving Pictures straight through, and are working on a new album. Here’s hoping that they bust out 2112 the next time out. It’s the only way to top that last tour.

Hope you enjoyed! Do you have a Sit N Spin idea for me? Send it my way  jolene at kisw.com

Cheers,
Jolene

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