Classic Rock + Heavy Metal


CLASSIC ROCK was originally conceived as a radio station programming formula which evolved into the album oriented rock (AOR) format of the early-1980s. In the United States, this rock music genre now features a large playlist of songs ranging from the early-1960s through to the early-1980s with more emphasis on the core albums, artists, and songs most often represented by the subset of recorded catalogue that was popular during the so-called original classic rock era (1964-1975) when rock and hard rock dominated the charts. British hard rock and progressive rock bands make up the central pillar of classic rock artists; significant among these are Led Zeppelin, ELP, The Who, Genesis, Pink Floyd, Jethro Tull, Yes and Queen.

Concept albums indirectly led to the album-rock format and remain a major component of classic rock. American-bred 70s rock acts such as Aerosmith and REO Speedwagon, Toto, Heart, Rush, Boston and Journey often appear on classic rock radio stations. Also included is late 60s rock from artists like Santana, Free, Jimi Hendrix, Procol Harum, Jeff Beck and Cream. In many areas, Southern rock, notably that of Lynyrd Skynyrd and ZZ Top forms a significant subset of classic rock programming as well. Other classic rock playlists also include some of the hard-rock/heavy metal bands of the 1980s such as AC/DC, Guns N' Roses and Van Halen as classic rock. While new generations of fans are drawn to the most enduring classic rock songs and artists, similarly, more modern material by bands such as U2, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, R.E.M., Soundgarden, Foo Fighters and The Red Hot Chili Peppers has proven to appeal to generations of older listeners.

Alice Cooper Will Scare You To Death On Welcome 2 My Nightmare And Leave You Begging For More

ALICE COOPER - Welcome 2 My Nightmare
Universal Music

Listening to Alice Cooper's diverse vocal range and musicianship is like watching a mélange of horror and drama inspired movies. Try to imagine all of this, but within the auditory spectrum side of things and it is quite out of this world. How does Cooper make all of this possible without losing his identity or without compromising his rich vocal delivery?

Well, here lies the truth, and it's going to blow your mind, no kidding, people. Alice's newest and greatest release (in my opinion, at least) is a strong collection of all of his musical influences from the time he began his career to the present day. "Welcome 2 My Nightmare" is such an unpredictable album that each track could be from another album of his but with a modern day twist. Now this is what I call sheer musical and songwriting brilliance.

It is Cooper's creative ability to blend metal, rock, funk and pop rock styles fused into one concoction of rock wizardry, which makes listening to this album kind of like riding a lengthy roller coaster with limitless highs and lows.

However, it should be noted, any listener expecting 14 tracks of pure heavy rock and metal will be disappointed with Cooper on "Welcome 2 My Nightmare" as this record is as musically and vocally as diverse as it gets with the way Cooper drives the point home with his vocals and songwriting talents on this one.

Ancient Rituals Are Reenacted in Modern Rock Concerts

Mythology, in ancient times, was in many ways the psychic glue that held cultures together. It gave them identity, and endowed their people with a sense of spiritual community. It's hard for any of us who're alive today to really envision what life under a functioning and life-giving mythology was like. The spiritual communion of the West has received some grievous blows, most notably during the Industrial Revolution and in the years since. But our psyches and souls instinctively need - and gravitate towards - the nourishing symbols and archetypes of myth. This is the reason why so many of the motifs of ancient rites find their echo in the rituals (particularly among the young) of the modern day. One prominent example is rock concerts.

The Greek playwrights believed that the greater the suffering depicted onstage within their tragedies, the greater the emotional catharsis their audience would experience. In the modern age, we've long pursued a love affair with tormented artists - gifted and doomed - amongst our painters, poets, writers and musicians. Onstage at a rock concert, the existential struggles of the performer are played out for all to see. And perhaps we unconsciously expect the self-destruction that so often occurs as a culmination. It is the fulfillment of the age-old fate of the tragic hero.

Modern music has revived many of the symbols and story arcs that lay at the heart of ancient rituals. This is especially true of Heavy Metal and its extreme subgenres. Here we often find lyrical content replete with magic, the supernatural, the demonic and the angelic. This can all be seen as an attempt the demarcate the bounds of our reality. How high can man rise - and how far can he fall?

Actual playlist

1. MORBID ANGEL: Altars Of Madness
2. ALARUM: Natural Causes
3. DEVIL: Time To Repent
4. LAKE OF MIND: Condemned Soul
5. CYNIC: Focus
6. TROUBLE: IV.
7. SLAYER: South Of Heaven
8. ANVIL: Juggernaut Of Justice
9. MERCYFUL FATE: Melissa
10. IMMORTAL: Blizzard Beasts

Top 3 Guitar Magazines To Help You Teach Yourself Guitar

There are many different ways that you can get lessons that will help you teach yourself guitar. There are guitar magazines, dvd's, cd's, books, tablature, online membership sites, teachers and probably a dozen other methods that I haven't even thought of. One of the oldest and most popular ways is the use of guitar magazines. You can find many of these magazines at your local bookstore, grocery store or corner/convenience store. Most of them will contain lessons, gear reviews, album reviews, interviews with guitar players and some even throw in a cd or dvd that have video lessons and gear demonstrations. If you really like a particular guitar magazine, subscriptions are available at discounted yearly or more rates.

So which one is the best? Well that depends on a few things:

1. Where you are in your guitar playing? Beginner, intermediate or advanced?

2. What style of music are you into? Hard Rock, Heavy Metal, Blues, Country etc.?

3. What do you want more of in your guitar magazine? Tabs, lessons, gear reviews?

Before you go running off to your local magazine stand to look for a magazine that's right for you, check out the following list that I have put together for you of 3 of the best guitar magazines that are available today. Please keep in mind that these are my choices of the top 3 and depending on your taste, you may think another publication is better. But at least this list will give you a head start and you don't have to thumb through every magazine on the rack.

Best Heavy Metal Guitar


There is hardly anyone who has never experienced the thrill and ecstasy generated by rock bands and rock artists. It is very common for guitarists to get associated with their favorite guitars - for instance, Jimi Hendrix and his Fender 60s reverse Headstock Stratocaster or Jimmy Page and his Gibson Les Paul Classic. Rock guitars have been evolving and continue to do so along with artists and their styles. If you are looking to buy the best heavy metal guitar, you should go for a guitar that suits your style and you are comfortable with it - there is no single "best" guitar that everyone would like.

If you are just starting to learn, you don't need an expensive guitar to begin with; you should go for an average affordable student guitar offered by an established brand. It will be simple to use and with good playability and resale value; for example, Fender's Squire Bullet.

There are several guitar makers - some are history makers, highly respected and well known; others are hardly known or just copy cats. But you should keep your requirement in mind, unless you are obsessed with some particular maker or model.

Top 20 Guitarists Of All Time - Guitar Players

It was a dark and rainy night. The courthouse clock struck midnight; a stray dog howled. It was all too beautiful when the staff of Gear Vault convened for their semi-annual secret meeting with the confines of the beloved cinder block chamber they call their "office." Their agenda? To decide the 20 most important people in guitar.

1. Jimi Hendrix

Widely recognized as one of the most creative and influential musicians of the 20th century, Jimi Hendrix pioneered the explosive possibilities of the electric guitar. Hendrix's innovative style of combining fuzz, feedback and controlled distortion created a new musical form. Because he was unable to read or write music, it is nothing short of remarkable that Jimi Hendrix's meteoric rise in the music took place in just four short years. His musical language continues to influence a host of modern musicians, from George Clinton to Miles Davis, and Steve Vai to Jonny Lang. Hendrix was the revolutionary guitar god, enuff said!

2. Edward Van Halen

Edward Van Halen once likened his guitar playing to "falling down the stairs and landing on my feet." Eddie's had thirteen albums' worth of such happy accidents and in the process has changed the way people play, hear and think about the electric guitar. With his unorthodox technique, dare-devil whammy bar antics and fearless experimentation, Van Halen revitalized heavy guitar after it had run its course in the Seventies. Espousing an I-just-play-that's-all-I-do attitude and favoring basic gear like stock Marshalls. Peavey 5150s, homemade, slapped together guitars and simple, minimal stop box effects, Van Halen became guitar's greatest hero by becoming its unassuming anti-hero.

The Best Electric Guitars For Hard Rock


If you search in Wikipedia for the style of music heavy metal you'll find that they have listed at least 3+ dozens of subgenres. From stoner metal to symphonic black metal, there's no shortage of mystic names.

Even though I like bands across the whole spectrum, the style that I seek as a guitar player and that I will always identify myself with is hard rock. But as times goes on this seems to be a style that is slowly fading.

Hard rock doesn't require the precision that heavy metal guitar playing has, super thin necks and active pickups are not a necessity But attitude, mojo and a good distorted sound, those are the main attributes I look for in a hard rock guitar.

Easy to Play Heavy Metal Guitar Techniques For Beginners


I would recommend every aspiring guitarist who wants to play heavy metal and contemporary rock music to learn guitar shredding styles. Shredding makes your playing more dynamic and interesting. It is the right usage of different shredding techniques that makes your playing sound melodious and musical.

These are some of the contemporary rock and heavy metal guitar techniques that is the staple for a heavy metal guitarist.

* Sweep picking - is a modern guitar playing style used to play extremely rapid arpeggios across the fretboard (sometimes on all strings).

* The tapping technique - is used to play a couple or 3 notes or to play arpeggios using pure legato with no picking. Various techniques are used to perform passages with wide intervals, and to create a flowing legato sound. Some performers make complex combination of tapping and sweep picking. This increases speed by reducing the motion of the strumming hand.

Top 7 Hard Rock And Heavy Metal Guitar Tunings

There are many different guitar tunings that are used in Rock and Metal music besides standard tuning. Guitar players in these genres like to use these tunings because they give a heavier and darker sound to their music.

Some of the more popular tunings used are Dropped D, Dropped C, Dropped B, E Flat, D, C and open G. Here are the descriptions of how the strings should be tuned and some of the bands that use them.

Dropped D tuning:

E ----------1st string

B ----------2nd string

G ----------3rd string

D ----------4th string

A ----------5th string

D ----------6th string (thickest)

This tuning enables power chords to be played with a single finger on the lowest three strings and produces a dark sound with it. If you're music doesn't fit together with this dark sound, you can place a capo on the 2nd fret and can still easily play power chords.

Best Guitar Strings for Playing Heavy Metal


When it comes to guitar strings, it's definitely not a case of "one size fits all". Different guitar strings are more suited to some styles and completely inappropriate for others. No matter how hard you try, playing Lamb of God songs on nylon strings just isn't going to work.

So, what kind of strings do you need for heavy metal? As a general rule of thumb, the harder you play, the heavier strings you'll need. Heavier strings give you a louder sound and can withstand heavier strumming better than lighter gauge strings, without going out of tune. Heavier strings also give you a full bass sound, which is something you need for playing Heavy Metal.

The downside to using heavier strings is that they're a bit more difficult to use when playing lead. Heavier strings don't bend as well and are more tiring for your wrist, especially if you're just starting out, or have to play for a long session.

One of the best options is to use a hybrid set of strings. A Hybrid pack usually have heavier bass and lighter top strings. This keeps power chords sounding full on the bottom end, while the lighter top 3 make it easier to play lead.

The Best Electric Guitars For Heavy Metal


Among the many aspects of heavy metal guitar, the one that has become more refined with every generation of players is the precision with which it's played.

Black Sabbath can be said to be a band that played in a loose sort of way, but most of today metal is not like that. Think of the difference between American baseball before steroids and after and you might be in the ballpark!

So it's only fitting that guitars mainly designed for heavy metal take ergonomics very serious. Craftsmanship, attention to detail, those are things that your parents look for in furniture, and lawyers and doctors in their Les Pauls.

Heavy Metal Guitar Techniques


Attitude, being aggressive and quick are the hall mark of heavy metal music. So, the techniques that you should adapt for this form of music should be exquisite and mesmerizing. If you are keen to learn the essential heavy metal guitar techniques then you might find this article quite handy. The guitar techniques that form an important aspect in any heavy metal band are mentioned below.

Palm muting

This is the technique where the guitar strings are muffled slightly, while the strings are picked simultaneously. This technique is executed by the picking hand i.e. the right hand in most of the cases. The main trick of this technique is to slightly mute the sound of the strings for the notes to be heard faintly. Palm muting can be better executed with electric guitars. It can also be performed in the acoustic guitars but the effect will not be that rocking.

Sepultura Albums - Death Metal History

One of the stalwarts of the heavy metal rock scene is Sepultura who was formed in 1984 in Belo Horizonte in Brazil. There are now 11 Sepultura albums released to date. The band's music has been categorized as death metal, thrash metal, and groove metal.

Musical Inspiration
The band had listed some of the great names in metal rock as their inspiration, namely Led Zepellin, Metallica, Black Sabbath, Motorhead, Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, AC/DC, and Deep Purple.

The Band's History
Sepultura has had a number of band members, but among those that belonged during its early existence was Paulo Jr., Jairo Guedez, and the brothers Max and Igor Cavalera. In 1985 they released their first LP titled Bestial Devastation. It was soon followed by their very own record, Morbid Visions. It included their first major hit, "Troops of Doom".


Morbid Visions was not technically at par with other commercially made records. The songs were poorly produced and even the band members had claimed that they forgot to tune their guitars during the recording sessions. Nevertheless the album was notable for being the entry of Sepultura to mainstream meda and to the consciousness and awareness of a much larger heavy metal audience.

After the release of their debut album, Jairo Guedez left the band and was soon replaced at lead guitar by Andreas Kisser. It was then that second of the Sepultura albums was released. They titled it Schizophrenia.

While Morbid Visions was more of a death metal album, Schizophrenia falls under the thrash metal category. The album found its way to Europe where it was heavily bootlegged. It was also during this time that Sepultura was trying to make it into the American heavy metal crowd by sending copies of their albums to various radio stations.

By the time their third album, Beneath the Remains, was released the band had already gained some popularity. They then embarked on their first international tour across the United States, Mexico, and Germany. It was during this tour that they met their music idols such as Metallica and Motorhead.

Their fourth album, Arise, was the first to make it to the Billboard 200 charts ranking at no. 119. By this time Sepultura was already recognized as the top band in the death metal and thrash metal scene.

However, the band was starting to experiment with other musical styles. With the fifth of the Sepultura albums, Chaos A.D., their music became more of hardcore punk. The album was released in 1993. This variation from death and thrash metal continued with their sixth album, Roots, which included some elements of the musical styles of the indigenous people of Brazil.

In 1996 Max Cavalera left the band with no statements as to the reason why he did so. Some years later his brother Igor also left Sepultura citing artistic incompatibility. Each of the Cavalera brothers had formed their own bands and are still actively playing and recording.

Sepultura's other albums include Against, Nation, Roorback, Dante XXI, and A-Lex with each release helping in cementing the role and contribution of Sepultura to the heavy metal rock scene.
Are You Looking For The Best Quality Sepultura Merch?
Then Visit: http://www.planet13.com.au

Metal Guitar Scale - 4 Killer Scales That Will Assuault Your Ear Drums

I often am asked by my students to show them a metal guitar scale. Well first I like to ask them to bring me a recording of one of their favorite metal bands. This helps me to decide which metal guitar scale they are accustomed to hearing in the music they love to listen to. With the many different genre's of metal available today it is impossible to pin-point a specific 'metal guitar scale'. This article aims to show the different scales used in metal music and how some work better with different kinds of metal.

Metal Guitar Scale #1
The first and grandfather of all rock and metal scales is the pentatonic. It is often times mixed with the blues scale also. If your preference is more rock based metal and older bands like Judas Priest, Black Sabbath, and even newer bands like Black Label Society the pentatonic scale is your scale of choice. This does not mean that these bands play the pentatonic scale exclusively, but they do use it heavily in their riffs and solos.

Death Metal Guitar Playing

For some people, music is all about death metal. A dose of death metal guitar playing can often get the blood rushing and the adrenaline pumping. No wonder, followers of metal music are seen head banging at concerts. Death and dark metal music can also been mixed with other forms of music like Middle Eastern, Jazz and Classical genres to produce musical magic. There are many online lessons that could help in understanding the breadth and depth of this genre that is full of intensity and spicy variations.

Although playing death metal apparently seems like an art beyond normal humans, many online guitar lessons can take enthusiasts closer to this dream one step at a time. There are many online courses that are helpful in perceiving the fine line that separates the styles of playing guitar for death metal and normal rock.

The variations of sound in playing dark metal music are what set it apart. The vocals are primarily low pitched, but full of thunder and intensity with occasional groaning too. To support these vocals, the guitar too needs to produce powerful and pounding notes. The term online lessons would use for this is 'power chord'. A power chord is simply a bass version of an actual chord. In other words the top three strings, which are heavy and produce a bass sound, are predominantly used.

Easy Steps to Master Death Metal Guitar Lessons

An extreme sub-genre of heavy metal, death metal genre of music emerged in the 1980's. Some of the 80's heavy metal bands like Venom, Slayer and Exodus inspired this extreme metal music which is characterized by morbid vocals and distorted guitars. Death metal guitar essentially involves downtuned notes and considerable use of techniques such as palm muting and tremolo picking. The music may make your head reel, but it is nearly not as difficult to master as it apparently seems. Internet can be your best source for finding out some excellent free death metal guitar lessons. But before you start searching for suitable downloads, first go through these easy to follow steps.

Acquire a guitar that can bear and support metal

The guitars that are made for soft pop can not obviously help you churn out the fast and dynamic music that is death metal genre is so famous of. No matter where you buy your guitar from, make sure the guitar is made to support the ferocious death metal music.

Ozzy Osbourne Ozzman Cometh Heavy Metal Music CD Review


Ozzman Cometh is the latest release from Heavy Metal Sensation Ozzy Osbourne, and I can only think of one word to describe this CD... AWESOME!

It's a rare day indeed that I get a CD from an artist that I can truthfully say does not have a bad track in the bunch. I'm more than happy to announce that's exactly what I must say about this one. There simply is NOT a bad one in the bunch. No fillers here at all, with each song standing tall on it's own.

Heavy Metal music fans will recognize some of the well known guests that have been assembled to play along with Osbourne on several of the tracks. Artists like Rick Wakeman and Geezer Butler just to name a couple.

Listen to and I think you'll agree that the song choices are excellent, the production is outstanding and Ozzy Osbourne is clearly in top form.

Mastodon - The New Wave of Metal Music


Mastodon is a band that is from Atlanta and considered to be a heavy metal or progressive metal band. They have become a notable band within the past few years, and since starting out back in 1999, they have accomplished a lot - touring across the world, releasing four albums, and increase and expanding their fan base.

Guitarist Bill Kelliher and Brann Dailor, a drummer, moved to Atlanta and they met up with Brent Hinds, a singer and guitarist, and Troy Sanders, singer and bassist. They met at a show, High on Fire. The realize they had a lot in common - an appreciation and love for sludge metal bands, and soon they would come together to form the band Mastodon. By 2001, the band was able to get a record deal with the label Relapse Records. Their first EP was released in 2001 - Lifesblood, and later in 2002 they would release their debut full album, Remission. The singles from this album include "Crusher/Destroyer" and "March of the Fire Ants."

Short Guide to Understanding Heavy Metal Music

What is Heavy Metal?

The definition of Heavy Metal can be both huge and ambiguous. There are so many different bands labeled in different metal sub-genera that are virtually impossible to follow them all. So, we can get to a point where we could ask: what heavy metal is. Is it loud guitars with distortion (just like rock n roll)?, pounding bass and drums (like dance music)?, a certain rhythm (different rhythms are used in different sub genera)?, an attitude?(we could argue that Madonna has the metal attitude). In general terms, Heavy Metal is a combination of everything we mentioned and more; therefore definitions should be left out of the equation. The word that best describes Heavy Metal is "lifestyle". A metal fan lives metal, and basically stays as a metal head for ever. The reason for this has been researched by science (just type heavy metal articles and you'll see), but for the metal fan definitions are not important (although we categorized bands by sub genera).


How to learn about the genera?

The best way to understand what Heavy Metal is, should be to listen to good references. If you don't know anything about it and wish to start, read reviews (there are several web pages that can help you in this task). If you do know something about it, share it with other people and let them know what good examples of records and bands are available.


I suggest to start with late 60's, early 70's hard edgier music like the Doors and Hendrix, then work your way up in time with Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, Kiss, Rush, Pink Floyd and King Crimson. For the late 70's and early 80's the references are Punk rock bands like The Clash, The Ramones and The Sex Pistols, along with AC/DC and the New Wave of British Heavy Metal (Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Saxon, Deff Leppard; etc.). In the Late 80's you should look for the Glam Metal movement (Mötley Crüe, Poison, Ratt, Bon Jovi , Guns n Roses and Dokken), and the Trash Metal scene with Slayer, Megadeth, Testament, Anthrax and Metallica music. The early 90's saw the Grunge movement surface with Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Stone Temple Pilots, and Alice in Chains. Additionally the Alternative Hard Rock Music became mainstream in the early 90's with bands like Faith No More and Tool and underground the Power, Death and Black Metal scenes grew strong (specially in Europe) with bands like Helloween, Gamma Ray for Power Metal; Death, Cannibal Corpse for Death Metal; and Dimmu Borgir and Emperor for Black Metal.

The late 90's and 2000's has seen a mixture of many influences for the mainstreams movements like Nu Metal (Limp Bizkit, Korn, Marilyn Manson, Linkin Park, Disturbed), and Metal Core (Trivium, Mudvayne, Bullet for My Valentine).

As you can see there are many bands and many sub genera and is virtually impossible to mention everyone, therefore there are many opinions where each band should be categorized. The best advise if you wish to learn is to listen to the bands and make your own opinion about what is really Heavy Metal.

How to approach Heavy Metal?

Metal music is free, so should be you. An open mind is fundamental to start listening to it. You should not be analytic at first, just try to find what are your preferences (remember, there are a lot of sub genera). A very important fact is that you are not going to be able to listen to every band there is, try to get the better ones from many sub genera and start from there.

Where can I learn about the bands, genera, albums, etc.?

There are many web pages and documentaries about the subject. You just search for Heavy Metal music on the Internet and you should get all the information you need. There are also many magazines specialized in general music and/or metal music that you can look for.

Black Metal Music


Normally approach in waves, with roots in old school thrash metal, black metal is a little know, often misinterpreted sub-genre. Metal has been an exit to disillusioned kids looking for a way out of internal struggles with personal, religious or cultures differences.. This little subset of dedicated fans have committed a great deal of crimes and felonies, such as church burnings (50 or more churches) and murders.

Black Metal Beliefs

Mayhem and Varg Vikernes is the most favorite metal band to date. In the year of 1993 Oystein Aarseth, owner of record label Deathlike Silence, was killed by Vikernes. Vikernes was found guilty of murder later that year. This impact, the anti-religious position of Vikernes was a expression of the views of the metal genre as a whole. With any culture, you will find the disputes, opinions and beliefs.


Impacts on Black Metal

Pioneered bands like Bathory and Cruachan took their music to a Viking lore and mythology style and made an impact on the metal music genre. These metal bands that are know as "folk" and "viking" often use instruments that are away from the norms and opt to compliment the common electric instruments, like guitars, drums and bass. This music includes bands with an ambient, symphonic and doom metal sound have been experimented. Old 80's punk movement (know as crust) to Gothic or even industrial influences have some further sounds that some black metal bands have pushed the envelope with.

The Black Metal Impression

Romanticized or demonized has had a living impression on the metal genre and will proceed to so long as there are fans disenfranchised with the world they see around them, requiring an exit for their creativity and individualism. With metal bands such as Venom and Celtic Front to the present and future. Black metal will become stronger, more shocking and will continue to be experimental.

Beyond Fallen Band Interview


Beyond Fallen, the latest NEPA area band to be signed to a major record label, has a lot going on right now and has struggled a great deal to get to where they are. There aren't many true metal bands in Pennsylvania (ask any struggling metal band), yet the band has received an ever-growing amount of recognition, locally and internationally. "Our approach at songwriting and our style clearly sets us apart locally because nobody else plays true metal - so it's like running in an election unopposed, ...though there are other bands in the world doing stuff like us."

Like many others before them, the band started by playing a few cover songs to find their own sound and style. They soon recorded their first EP, and then their first full-length CD, "Lost in the Shadows," by 2005. The European metal scene took notice instantly, leading to a spot on Headbanger's Open Air Festival and eventually signing to Melissa Records.

About Skullcandy Headsets


Almost everybody owns a multimedia gadget or equipment. This can be a home multimedia system or the portable multimedia gadget. These days' people cannot seem to live without technology in their lives. Could you? These gadgets may be computers, music players, video cameras and much more. The most popular gadget almost everybody own is a mobile phone. Are you into music? Or do you consider yourself a gaming geek or a computer nerd?

Headsets is not something new but is has been around for awhile and is constantly innovated. Manufacturers of multimedia technology have created many ways in attracting consumers to constantly update their audio and gaming device. There are a lot of headsets sold in the market who try to add that spark in their product. Unfortunately, they fail to get consumers interest.

skullcandy headsets add that cool vibe to your over all street persona. This brings out in you that attitude while out in the street listening to your songs on your mp3 or iPod. It comes in many forms, variations, designs and colors. You can be that cool guy in the neighborhood, in school, at the mall or at work. You can even change your headsets, if you can afford it, which will match your outfit for the day. Or buy a classic design, why don't you?


Always look around the stores in malls before buying a headset. Don't grab and pay for the first headset you laid eyes on. You have to test the quality of the headset. You can search for the most popular brand to your liking. Are you into the professional looking headsets or are you into the hip and young brands? Will you be using it mainly for listening to music, for gaming or for online work? Compare prices and ask yourself if the shipping fee is worth paying for the product.

A skullcandy headset does not only cater to audio devices but also for gaming devices like Xbox as well. Skullcandy headset sets themselves apart from competitors by their fierce graphic design and colorful headset choices. In the multimedia industry, Skullcandy headsets are known to be of superior quality in material, technology and sound. These are the same factors we all consider before buying a headset and these are durability and clarity in sound.

Headsets manufactured by skullcandy come in many forms. Headsets could be over ear, on ear, earphones, wireless, for gaming, sports buds, for DJ and with in-line Mic. It comes in many iconic designs such as Rasta headsets, Paul Frank, skull print, NBA teams, and plaid print and in various colors imaginable in the color wheel. skullcandy headsets have every design perfect for the cool guy and cool girl in you. There is always one that is suitable to your needs and your personality.

The Black Roses DVD Review

With the underground success of Metalocalypse, the deification of Ozzy Osbourne as reality television star, and countless Behind the Music profiles in which aging headbangers warmly reminisce about their glory days of boozing and whoring, it was only a matter of time before someone transferred The Black Roses from a forgotten video tape master to a commercially available DVD (Synapse Films).

It's a matter of personal taste whether such a transfer should ever have occurred, and certainly depends on your age and tastes circa 1988. If around that time you teased your hair and strangled your leg with a bandana, then you likely already own a copy of this movie which you store on the shelf next to the Lost Boys and This is Spinal Tap. If you never experienced this sordid time in history, then viewing this movie about a demonic heavy metal band who wreaks havoc on a small town will most likely leave you with a look of dumb bewilderment.

Skullcandy Headphone Concept: Headbanger

For those of you who like to listen to music while you work out, you know that it usually comes with a number of problems. An ear bud may fall out in the middle of a work out, it's uncomfortable to wear, and last but not least, the sound quality is never really that great. I know I have encountered these problems many times. Luckily, thanks to designer Benjamin Lotte and Skullcandy, these problems may just have been solved. The Headbanger headphones look like they will allow you to blast away calories-and your eardrums-in comfort.

This headphone/headband hybrid looks like it will have a number of cool and useful features. The headband will be adjustable to prevent the headphones from falling off in the middle of your workout,

Current Faves - Actual Playlist

1. ARCH/MATHEOS: Sympathetic Resonance
2. DEATHSTORM: Storming With Menace
3. AGONY: The First Defiance
4. CHARRED WALLS OF THE DAMNED: Cold Winds On Timeless Days
5. MOTÖRHEAD: Ace Of Spades
6. KREATOR: Terrible Certainty
7. VIRUS: Force Recon
8. NIHILIST: Demo Collection
9. MASSACRA: Enjoy The Violence
10. OZZY OSBOURNE: The Ultimate Sin

Actual playlist

1. DELIRIUM: Zzooouhh

2. POSSESSED: Seven Churches

3. EXCRUCIATOR: Devouring

4. ASPHYX: The Rack

5. DEATH: Scream Bloody Gore

6. KREATOR: Pleasure To Kill

7. IMMORTAL: Diabolical Fullmoon Mysticism

8. CELTIC FROST: To Mega Therion

9. SOLITUDE AETURNUS: Beyond The Crimson Horizon

10. TROUBLE: Manic Frustration

Actual playlist

1. EXCITER: Heavy Metal Maniac
2. MERCYFUL FATE: Don't Break The Oath
3. ARTILLERY: By Inheritance
4. LIVING DEATH: Metal Revolution
5. COUNT RAVEN: Destruction Of The Void
6. SACRIFICE: Torment In Fire
7. FORBIDDEN: Forbidden Evil
8. ATLAIN: Guardians Of Eternity
9. MORBID SAINT: Spectrum Of Death
10. PROTECTOR: Urm The Mad

Stormwitch - Andy Mück






A little chat about the 25th anniversary of the third album Stronger Than Heaven, of the legendary German heavy/speed act Stormwitch. The answers were given by singer Andy Aldrian.

So Andy, let we start with the past, while the NWOBHM was ruling the world, in Germany things were a bit different, many bands with a special „teutonic” sound were coming out, most of them soon to disappear in the early eighties. Bands like Gravestone, Noisehunter, Veto, High Tension, Tyrant, Running Wild, Steeler, Grave Digger...and of course Stormwitch (earlier Lemon Sylvan), do you still remember how the band got together exactly? What about your musical backgrounds, experiences? Was Lemony Sylvan the very first band for all of you?
We were friends at school and liked the same kind of music. Our school was very depressing and the small town from where we came from was very boring nothing for young males who wanted to see the world and make experiences.We were keen to have adventures to make our own band was our ticket for a new life. When we started there where no Heavy - Metal scene. There were Hard Rock. Hard Rock was bands like: Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple. Hard Rock was more intellectual more poetic so we nomed our first band Lemon Sylvan. But we wanted a concept that was harder, crueler and darker and as we heard the first Iron Maiden album with songs like Phantom Of The Opera or Transylvania it was an manifestation.
Who came up with the name Stormwitch? Did it sound more metallic, than Lemon Sylvan?
In 1983 we named our band Stormwitch. Storm for the music and witch for dark and mystic lyrics.
In 1984 they released your debut „Walpurgis Night” album through Gama Records, do you think, that your career was on the way?
Gama Records was no big deal but it was a good opportunity to stay independent. We could create our own cover, choose our own photographer we could wear the clothes that we wanted and could play our music in the way that we liked it.
A year later came out „Tales Of Terror” and if I remember correctly, you had some troubles during the recording sessions, the studio and the tapes were burnt, right?
Yeah, we had a lot of bad luck during the recording of Tales Of Terror. But also a lot of fun. Nearby the studio was a well known place called the Rock Fabrik where they played Hard Rock and Heavy Metal. It was a good place for drinking beer. We made our first experiences with girls there I saw important bands of the Metal scene there in their younger years, Manowar, Slayer for example.
Were you aware of Hallow’s Eve also released an album (their debut) with the title „Tales Of Terror” in 1985?
No, we had the idea for the album title from The Alan Parsons Project album, Tales Of Mystery And Imagination.
At which point did you start writing the material for your third album, that became „Stronger Than Heaven”? How did the song composing go as a whole? Is it true, that Stefan Kauffman (Steve Merchant) and Harald Spengler (Lee Tarot) composed the whole material in 14 days? Why did you have to hurry at all?
Two weeks before we went to the studio Lee Tarot and Stefan Kaufmann closed themselves up in a room and came back after 14 days with the whole material, stinking hungry and tired. We had to fulfill the contract with Gama: Every year an album.
What about the recordings sessions? Did you have a decent budget to record the material?
No. Independent always means: you start with nothing and later on you have debts.
How do you view, that with this album Stormwitch became more original with the image you started wearing old costumes from the baroque era of the 17th and 18th centuries?
At that time the ideas came from Lee and Steve also to wear baroque costumes contrary to all expectations it was very satisfying for me personally. The outfit fit me very well and my adventures with women of all kind increased.
Instead of spikes and leather you changed your outfit to baroque costumes, was your goal to take distance and different yourselves from all those speed-/thrash-/black metal bands, that were appearing or existing at this point?
Lee Tarot always hated Speed, Thrash, Black, Death Metal - he always loved melodic songs Eye Of The Storm is mainly his album. I myself was at that time just the singer in the band. I never was so distant to such bands. I loved Venom, the best live show I ever saw was King Diamond from Mercyful Fate. Like everybody I love Reign In Blood from Slayer and Metallica’s Kill'em All for me is their best album. Kill'em All what a statement !
You named yourselves as the Masters of the black romantic, that became an inherent part of the band, how do you explain this?
Black Romantic was a period in the English literature, it is also called Gothic novels: H. Walpole The Castle Of Otranto, Ann Radcliffe The Mysteries Of Udolpho, The Monk from M. G. Lewis for example. The scenes of this novels were always old castles or monasteries. We always loved the atmosphere of such places and in our phantasy we lived inside these thrilling stories. Many people have longings for such places and stories.
Do you agree with, that the incredible quality of this album obviously helped the band a lot to move another step forward?
Yes, hear it. I love you for those sentences you bastard. Correct. Yes, yeah we all liked it. The sound is terrible.
Is Stronger than Heaven certainly an album, that any trad metal fan will enjoy from the first spin?
What do you think about, that the result is a top notch record of speedy metal influenced by Running Wild/Helloween, but also with a perfectly clear personal character, thanks to the ever present new wave touches, the melodic guitar leads, your characteristic vocal and of course the occult lyrics and atmosphere (trademark of the band)?
In 1987 Stormwitch was a bunch of high motivated, very creative musical amateurs. No, but the ideas on this album are absolutely great, like on every Stormwitch album. I say that very humble.
In 1986 Stormwitch did their first and only German tour supported by Stranger and Killer, how did the whole tour go? Can you tell us more about it?
The singer from Stranger lost his voice after the first half of the tour because he was constantly drunked and didn't slept an hour. Killer had these L.A.Rocker poser image and when we played in Casrtop - Rauxel they had a gang bang with one of the groupies. That is not my cop of coffee. I myself had same special affairs very erotic, very special.
Strangely, the band was way more popular in Eastern Europe and spent more time touring and promoting there for example in Hungary (Budapest), what do you recall of those Hungarian shows? You had a lot of followers and die hard fans in Hungary…
In Hungary I had the best days of my life and I am happy that we play at the Metal - Fest in Budapest in June. I always loved the warm and sincere way that the Hungarian fans loved us.
Is it correct, that even a fan club was created, under the name of Witch Attack, that stayed with the band until the very end, but somehow the magazines and general media kept on ignoring the band, giving much more support to Helloween, Running Wild or Rage?
Yes, it is correct, but I have no problem with that.
Why did you never really achieve that kind of popularity?
You have to be at the right place at the right time. We were never at the right place at the right time without Hungary - that was always a great time.
Thanks to Hammerfall (who covered your classic „Ravenlord”), Stormwitch fortunately became known by the younger generations, right?
Yes, very special thanks to Hammerfall.
Did they help taking the band’s name, the legend alive?
Yes. You are right since that Stormwitch is a legend.
Andy, thanks a lot for the interview, anything to add, that I forgot to ask?
I’m glad to see you all in Budapest !

Pannónia Fesztivál - Cseri Parkerdő - 2011. 06. 09.

















Amikor tudomásomra jutott, hogy a Twisted Sister fellép az immár ötödszörre megrendezésre kerülő, négy napos Pannónia fesztiválon, arra gondoltam, hogy valaki nagyon poénos kedvében van. Április tréfaként fogtam fel, ugyanis az esztendő negyedik hónapjában tudtam meg ezt az információt. Miután utánanéztem, hogy a hír nem kacsa, hanem valós, egyértelmű volt számomra, hogy a Cseri Parkerdőben lesz a helyem június 9.-én.
A viszonylag gyors beengedés után a Port.hu színpadot (amúgy négy színpad volt) céloztam meg, ugyanis ott léptek fel a new yorki istenek. A fesztivál első fellépője számomra a BEATRICE volt. A ’88-ban megjelent duplalemezen (78/88) kívül nem túlzottan hallgatom a zenekar kiadványait, mindenféle sértő szándék nélkül, nekem az a korszak a Beatrice. Értelemszerűen a Nagyvárosi Farkas, a XX. Század, a Katicabogárka vagy a Boldog Szép Napok többet mondanak, jelentenek nekem, mint az Őrületes Rock ’N’ Roll. Sajnos nem volt Jerikó és Motorizált Nemzedék, de a csapat rendelkezésére álló egy órás műsor így is tömény, intenzív és szórakoztató volt.
Ajándék volt részt venni a Twisted Sister sajtótájékoztatóján, begyűjteni autogramjaikat, közös fotókat készíteni velük, azonban Dee Snider unszimpatikus hozzáállása kiverte a biztosítékot. Történt, hogy minden idők legnagyobb frontembere, egyik legnagyobb énekese, nemes egyszerűséggel felhúzott a turnébuszra és a koncert kezdetéig ki sem dugta onnan az orrát, ergo közös fotó, dedikáció felejtős. A sajtótájékoztató után az EDDA vette birtokba a deszkákat, amely legnagyobb meglepetésemre egy méregerős best of programmal rukkolt ki. Ha nem tévedek a „legfrissebb” dalok a Szellemvilág és az Elérlek Egyszer voltak. Jó formában, energikusan vezette elő a zenekar az olyan klasszikusokat, mint a Minden Sarkon, a Torony (!!!), a Kölyköd Voltam, a Győzni Fogunk vagy a Gyere Őrült. Pataki Attila énekes politikát sem nélkülöző, itt-ott obszcénba hajló átkötő szövegeit megspórolhatta volna, ettől függetlenül kiváló hangulatot teremtettek, kiváló koncertet láttunk/halottunk tőlük.
20.50-kor, a kiírt fél kilences kezdés helyett aztán elérkezett a várva várt pillanat: színpadra lépett minden idők egyik legalapvetőbb, legmeghatározóbb zenekara a TWISTED FUCKIN’ SISTER. 2004-es Summer Rocks-os koncertjük után másodszor tették tiszteletüket nálunk. Különbség annyi volt a hét évvel ezelőtti előadáshoz képest, hogy ezúttal elhagyták a sminkeket, a klasszikus fellépő ruhákat, kizárólag Dee The Fuckin’ Snider énekes használt egy kevés szemkihúzót. A régi időknek megfelelően az intro után a What You Don’t Know (Sure Can Hurt You) – a Eddie „Fingers” Ojeda és Jay Jay French gitárosok valamint Mark „The Animal” Mendoza basszusgitáros a közönségnek háttal állva pengettek, Snider pedig atombombaként robbant a színpadra, „Good evening welcome to our show…” – The Kids Are Back – Stay Hungry hármason rongyoltak át és kezdetét vette az extázis, az eszméletvesztés. Minthogy a többi fellépőnél már kiválóan belőtték a hangzást, a Sisternél sem volt semmi kivetnivaló a megszólalással, akkorát ütött a banda, hogy még. Ellentétben a Summer Rocks-szal Eddie-nél nem merültek fel technikai problémák, gördülékenyen, olajozottan ment a show. A SHOW! Dee Snider 55 évesen úgy tombolt, rohangált a színpadon, mint egy ereje teljében lévő, 20-21 esztendős fiatal titán, irányította a műsort, énekeltette a közönséget, a hátán vitte a produkciót. A sajtótájékoztatón mutatott negatív magatartása ellenére is azt mondom, hogy ő minden idők legnagyobb frontembere, showmanje, hangja mit sem kopott az évek során, elemi erővel törtek fel üvöltései illetve az olyan klasszikusok, mint a The Price vagy a The Fire Still Burns dallamait is mindenféle erőfeszítés nélkül énekelte ki. Képtelenség volt fotózni a sajtóárokból (csak az első három dalra kaptunk engedélyt), egy óriási szőke, göndör hajtenger volt csak látható belőle, megállás nélkül mozgott, bejárta a színpad minden egyes négyzetcentiméterét. Ezzel szemben Eddie, Jay Jay és Mark egy helyben állva, statikusan pengettek. Felesleges hosszasan méltatni a programot, ugyanis ezekkel a dalokkal nem lehet hibázni, a metal/rock történelem legnagyobb klasszikusairól van szó, különösebb kommentárt nem kell hozzájuk fűzni (pl. Shoot ’em Down, Under The Blade, You Can’t Stop Rock ’n’ Roll). Annak ellenére, hogy mindenki tudta mekkora buli lesz, a negyedikként elhangzó, súlyos, lassú Captain Howdy-t nyugodtan nevezhetjük meglepetésnek, lévén sosem volt a korai Twisted Sister koncertek repertoárjának szerves része. Egy hibátlan dalokat felvonultató koncertbe elméletileg nem lehet (szabad) belekötni, én most még is megteszem, mert A. J. Pero dobszólója teljesen felesleges volt, akkor inkább már játszották volna el a We’re Gonna Make It-et, az I Am (I’m Me-t) vagy a Ride To Live Live To Ride-ot. Amúgy Pero dobszolóját az AC/DC klasszikusa, a Whole Lotta Rosie követte, mintegy tisztelegve az ausztrál csapat előtt, egyben kinyilvánítva, demonstrálva, hogy honnan indult el anno a zenekar, milyen hatásokból táplálkozik muzsikájuk. Ahogy az várható volt, a We’re Not Gonna Take It-nél és az I Wanna Rock-nál Snider mester megéltette a közönséget, félelmetes volt, ahogy a Burn In Hell-nél piros lámpa világította meg, tehát mindent megkaptunk, amit vártunk. Rettentő szimpatikus volt Jay Jay French beszéde, melyben a gitáros kifejtette, hogy a metal nemzetközi muzsika, kapocs az emberek között, összeköti az embereket, míg a pop, a rap stb. csak trend, jönnek és mennek, az olyan nagy bandák, mint a Motörhead, a Black Sabbath, az AC/DC, a Judas Priest vagy éppen ők ennyi év után és sok szarságot leküzdve még mindig talpon vannak és hogy eddig eljutottak, azt a rajongóknak köszönhetik. A mintegy másfélórás műsor végén (a ráadásban) a Come Out And Play és az S. M. F. adták meg a kegyelemdöfést. A korosztály összetételét illetően, a skála a 8 évestől a 60 évesig terjedt, magyarán a csapat muzsikája korosztálytól független és abszolút időtálló. A Twisted Sister jött, látott és (újra) győzött, azonban a koncert után már nem volt módunk találkozni velük, mivel felmentek a buszba és úgy elhúztak, hogy magukkal sem találkoztak.
Sch-dt barátommal azt taglaltuk a műsor után, hogy képességeiket tekintve a zenészek nem tartoznak a műfaj elitjéhez, krémjéhez (ez különösen Mark Mendoza-ra igaz, aki végig csak csapkodta a bőgő húrjait), mégis egy nagyon jól összerakott és felépített csapatról, klasszikus lemezekről, dalokról beszélünk. (Tulajdonképpen úgyis fogalmazhatnék, hogy a Twisted Sister Dee Sniderről szól). Egyértelmű, hogy bőven kiérdemelték a halhatatlan státuszt, történelmet írták, megkérdőjelezhetetlen, hogy a Rock ’n’ Roll Hall Of Fame-jében van a helyük. Egy újabb páratlan és meghatározó élménnyel gazdagodva indultam haza a program után, remélem mihamarabb újra kis hazánkba jönnek. Képtelenség őket megunni.
Dr. Feelgood

Actual Playlist

1. MORBID: Year Of The Goat
2. TOXIC TRACE: Torment
3. ORIGIN: Entity
4. E-X-E: Stricken By Might
5. JUDAS PRIEST: Screaming For Vengeance
6. PESTILENCE: Consuming Impulse
7. DOWN: Nola
8. ASPHYX/HOODED MENACE: Split 7"
9. SYMPHONY X: Iconoclast
10. BLACK OATH: The Third Aeon

Current playlist - Actual faves

1. MORBID ANGEL: Illud Divinum Insanus
2. HATE ETERNAL: Phoenix Amongst The Ashes
3. ANVIL: Juggernaut Of Justice
4. BLACK OATH: The Third Aeon
5. NADER SADEK: In The Flesh
6. NASTY SAVAGE: Indulgence
7. ATHEIST: Piece Of Time
8. TOXIC TRACE: Torment
9. METALLICA: Kill 'em All
10. KREATOR: Terrible Certainty

Twisted Sister Mania

1. TWISTED SISTER: Come Out And Play
2. TWISTED SISTER: You Can't Stop Rock 'N' Roll
3. TWISTED SISTER: Live At The Hammersmith
4. TWISTED SISTER: Stay Hungry
5. TWISTED SISTER: Under The Blade
6. TWISTED SISTER: Singles and Ep-s
7. TWISTED SISTER: Live from Rochester New York - Rochester War Memorial, 1984. 07. 18. - bootleg
8. TWISTED SISTER: Twist Of The Wrist - Live in Rochester, 1984. 10. 14. - bootleg
9. TWISTED SISTER: You Can't Stop Rock At Donnington - Live at the Monsters Of Rock Festival, 1983. 08. 20. - bootleg
10. TWISTED SISTER: Deetroit Disciples, Live at the Fox Theatre - Detroit, 1986. 01. 30. - bootleg

Onslaught interview with Nige Rockett












1986 was the best year for metal, a lot of classic, influential masterpieces were released this year, such as Eternal Devastation (Destruction), Pleasure To Kill (Kreator), Reign In Blood (Slayer), Darkness Descends (Dark Angel), Doomsd`y For The Deceiver (Flotsam & Jetsam) to name a few. Although the British bands didn't belong to the top of thrash metal, Onslaught were a very good act, their masterpiece The Force came out in 1986 too. The record celebrates its 25th jubilee, so I got in touch with guitarist Nige Rockett to speak about this classic record.

So Nige, since The Force album celebrates its 25th anniversary, I want to talk with you about it, all right?
Hi My friend, yeah that’s cool, it would be a pleasure…!
Do you still remember at which point did you start writing the material for the record? How did the song composing go as a whole?
I remember it very well.. We used to rehearse in a local youth club, we wrote all the material for THE FORCE during these sessions over a period of about 6 months.. I would work on music and lyric ideas at home and bring them to rehearsal where the band would develop them into full songs..
Some changes happened compared to the first album; first you left COR (Children Of Revolution) Records and you were signed by Under One Flag/MFN, how did that happen? Was it a good decision, in terms of promotion, label support etc.?
Yeah COR records was a very small label run by a friend on a government scheme, he did a fantastic job with the release even though he had very limited resources, the record was a real big seller worldwide for a debut album and really brought great attention to the name of Onslaught… so much so that we were contacted by MFN records who were interested in releasing the bands second album.. We had no contract with COR and they were very happy to see us move to such a big label as MFN.. It was a real big deal for Onslaught, as MFN had bands such as Metallica and Anthrax on their roster, so yeah it was a very very good decision for us.. The label were awesome and the support and promo really was excellent, which really helped us take the next step up the ladder..
Was only Under One Flag that showed an interest in signing the band by the way?
They wasted no time in asking to sign the band after the immediate success of Power From Hell, and they were the only label that we wanted to work with, so any other label never existed as far as we were concerned…..
Former vocalist Paul Mahoney took over the bass duties, while former bass player Jase Stallard switched to rhythm guitar and a new singer Sy Keeler joined the band, can you tell us more about it?
It was in our rehearsal room where we met Sy Keeler.. He came along to a rehearsal one night with a crew member just to watch and by the end of the session he was part of the band hahaha.. We heard he was a good singer so we asked him to have a blast with one of the new songs, he sounded so cool we offered him the job there and then…
We had been thinking about adding a second guitarist for sometime and when Sy appeared it really finalized our decision. Paul Mahoney was also a bassist and Jase Stallard could play guitar so it was an east transition to make. We just reshuffled the personnel and gave the band a totally different sound…
What can you tell us about Sy’s musical background? Did you perhaps audition other singers too besides him or was he the first choice being the singer of the band?
Sy Keeler had never been in a band previous to Onslaught, as I said earlier it was just spontaneous decision to have him join the band, we weren’t even looking for a new vocalist..
Did Sy have a big hand in the songwriting or was the material ready and written, when he joined?
All the material was already written for The Force album when Sy joined, he just added some of his own vocal melodies and obviously delivered the songs in his very own style..
During January/February 1986 you entered the Martix Studios with Dave „Death” Pine, what about the recording sessions? Were you more prepared than with the previous album? Did you have a decent budget to record the album?
Yeah were pretty well prepared we had rehearsed hard before entering the studio and got everything as precise as possible, we are definitely not a band to write in the studio... We had 2 weeks to make the recording, which was cool and yeah the budget was fairly decent, Matrix was a decent studio, the Sex Pistols recorded ‘Never Mind the Bollocks’ there which we thought was awesome to make our record in the same place as them….
The Force shows a great development compared to Power From Hell, was it a natural progression or did you work extremely hard on it?
It was a natural development, but we also worked very hard at it… the progression was purely down to an improvement in our musical skills, lots and lots of practice enabled us to have the ability to write and perform better songs…
Most of the songs on here are quite long, going into the 6 minute range, but without becoming overlong, what do you think about it?
Yeah, we just let things follow a natural course, I think there are maybe a few parts we could have cut back and made shorter in retrospect, but there are no unnecessary sections to the songs, every part is crucial to the overall picture of The Force album… we liked using lots of tempo and rhythm changes to make it an interesting album, Power From Hell was quite one dimensional by comparison..
Would you say, that newer musical influences happened to you/were hit by you? I mean, your musical range of interests became wider and in my opinion, The Force is very similar to the Bay Area scene…
No I don’t think so… our influences never changed and are still the same today, the changes were purely down to an improvement in our musicianship, nothing more really…
How do you explain, that the songs had been more matured than on the debut, but the songs didn’t lose any brutality, heaviness or speed and on the contrary, songs like the rhythmic opener „Let There Be Death”, the mid tempo hammer „Metal Forces” or the speed massacre „Thrash Till the Death” with its great break are the best or at least, one of the best examples of 80s thrash metal?
Thank you, real kind of you to say…. We were just learning to become better song writers at the time, the heaviness was always gonna be there, but we had now learned to refine the brutality and channel it in a more mature kind of way..
Is it correct, that „Metal Forces” was dedicated to Bernard Doe’s magazine, because he was very supportive of you?
Yes, of course.. Bernard Doe was very instrumental in helping Onslaught climb the ladder so quickly. He ran a great magazine and was so supportive of the band in the early days, I believe he also recommended that ‘Music for Nations Records’ should sign the band, which they did and that’s exactly why we are here talking right now :)
The Force is an excellent album from beginning to end, all killer no filler, right? What are your favourite tracks from the record?
That’s our intention with every record we make, we try our best to have no fillers at all.. My favourite track is probably ‘Let There be Death’ It still sounds so cool to play live, I love all the changes in the song, its just real fast and heavy with lots of hooks…..
Do you agree with, that you tightened up your sound, with a much sharper-sounding riff assault that is pure thrash metal and The Force sounded better than the debut? Was it an even stronger effort?
Definitely a stronger album than ‘Power From Hell’ no question.. PFH was very raw and basic but The Force is much more refined…
What kind of reviews did you get back in the day? How much like the Onslaught fans the record?
All the reviews were amazing, I never actually seen one poor review for ‘The Force’ which was very cool. The press and the fans really loved the record and still do in 2011, which cannot be bad…
The Force came out in 1986, in the year, when influential classics, such as Master Of Puppets (Metallica), Doomsday For The Deceiver (Flotsam And Jetsam), Reign In Blood (Slayer), Darkness Descends (Dark Angel), Pleasure To Kill (Kreator), Eternal Devastation (Destruction) etc. were released, were you familiar with these outfits and albums? In your opinion, did thrash metal reach its peak at this point?
Yeah of course we knew these bands, I think 86 / 87 Thrash really hit a peak, there were so many great bands and great album releases around this time, the scene was intense and very cool….
What were the show sin support of the record? Can you tell us more about your gigs?
We played so many shows around this time in Europe, it was total insanity every time.. We loved all the stage diving and actively encouraged fans to join us on stage, there were some very violent crowd reactions back then… quite a few venues got torn up and literally destroyed.
I have a bootleg in my collection titled Hell in Copenhagen 28.03.87, are you aware of this release? Does it really represent/capture Onslaught’s live brutality?
I am aware of the bootleg but I have never actually listened to it….
Did Onslaught leave its mark with The Force on the thrash scene? Do you name it an influential, classic thrash record? Is The Force the best thrash record, that came from England/Britain?
Yes definitely, it's not a perfect release but it has been hailed as a classic Thrash metal album and that’s a very big honor for Onslaught…. Haha no, ‘Sounds of Violence’ is now the best thrash album to come from the UK… ;)
Although some thrash bands appeared in Britain (England) during the middle of the ’80s, such as Virus, Deathwish, Xentrix, Sabbath, D. A. M. etc., would you say, that thrash metal hadn’t such a strong background, like in Germany for example? I mean, the British thrash metal bands didn’t manage to breakthrough…
In terms of bands the UK has never been that strong for producing real good ones, its strange because there are many many many Thrash fans here.. But we never had a good band scene, there just were not the amount of musicians that there were in the US or Germany…
After the release of the record began a new chapter/history in the career of the band (I’m thinking of the line up changes and the change of your music), how could you sum up that period? I mean, ’til the release of the In Search Of Sanity album?
The ‘In Search of Sanity’ period was not a good one for us to remember, too many negative things happened in this time and it would eventually lead to the band breaking up. There was just too much outside influence for us to deal with.. But now we are back and very very strong once again just like the old days, lots of fire and more brutality than ever before….!!!!
Thank you for the interview my friend, see you soon
Nige

Interview with Michael Zaputil (Sexist, Agent Steel)











Mike, do you still remember, how did you discover music and how did you turn into hard rock/metal?
My parents always had music in the house, my father was a radio announcer/DJ in Billings, Montana in the 1950’s, so he had had a shit-load of records. All bigband, polka,& swing music from the ’30s, 40’s and ’50s. He HATED rock music, so you can about imagine what he thought of the music his son made. He attended only one Agent Steel show we did at the Whiskey in late ’86, he shook his head and left before I had a chance to introduce him to Dave Mustaine and Dave Ellefson who were backstage with us in support. Oh well. I discovered hard rock on the radio when I was about 11, but also discovered and loved (and still do) the ’60s and ’70s soul and R&B at that time as well.
At which point did you decide playing an instrument? Was bass the first instrument that you’ve picked up?
My first instrument was the accordian, at 8 years of age, my folks being Croatian (Yugoslav) and German/Hungarian set me on that path, as you would figure. I was really a good player, read sheet music and did recitals at the school I was trained, and everything, but I hated it, they had to force me to practice. I picked up guitar at 15, but my brother got a bass guitar at a swap meet so I started playing that as well. I only switched to bass because no one else at the time played that instrument well. In a way, that was a good thing because I play the bass very guitar-like, alot of chords and with a pick so I can play very fast rhythms and licks. This style I formed from punk rock, Klaus Floride of the Dead Kennedys especially.
Do you play other instruments too?
Nowadays aside from bass is my guitar, which I use to write material with.
What were your influences become a musician? Were you self taught or did you often take lessons?
My influences began with Geezer Butler. Self taught. I took a couple of lessons from the guy in Steppenwolf, can’t remember his name when I was 17, in 1977. I decided it was a waste of my time, so I did what I always did and taught myself songs from my favorite records, usually Black Sabbath and Alice Cooper, and sad to say, Kiss. (I hate Kiss now, lol!) Around 1980 I started listening to the DKs, and took it from there.
As for you musical taste and interest, were you into established, well known outfits or did you rather prefer the underground ones?
I was into the typical mainstream stuff (see above) at first, not knowing any better until about 1979 a friend that I grew up with was really into punk rock and turned me on to the Sex Pistols, the Clash, X, Black Flag, Germs, and the Dead Kennedys. A whole new world opened up for me with those bands, but I also got into stuff like Wall of Voodoo, The Tubes, Oingo Boingo, Killer Pussy, X-Ray Spex, Plasmatics and a lot of out-there stuff. To this day, I always prefer the underground- it is by far much more honest, interesting, and real to me.
Being based in Los Angeles, what do you recall of the early ’80s L. A .scene?
Well, I haven’t been based in L.A. for twelve years, however back then it was an interesting time. If you were into punk, you had the Circle Jerks, Fear, Black Flag, X, etc. on the outskirts of town. On the Strip, you would have Y&T (Yesterday & Today) come down from San Francisco to play at the Starwood, you had the early Quiet Riot and London, Ala Carte, and Snow, you even had Judas Priest come over to play in the clubs back then, believe it or not.
Would you say, that it was great underground buzz with a lot of new bands, that started their career, such as Armored Saint, Metallica, Slayer, Shellshock (later known as Dark Angel), Vermin, Sceptre etc.?
Absolutely. It was like we were all like-minded, we all discovered Judas Priest, Scorpions and Iron Maiden, but had punk influences too. We all grew up on Black Sabbath - the band that started it all. Well sort of, alot of us like myself learned hard rock from Cream, and Jimi Hendrix.
Do you think, that the L. A. scene was divided into two parts? There were the glam/hair bands (Mötley Crüe, W. A. S. P., Ratt, Dokken etc.) and the thrash/speed/power etc. underground ones…
Oh yes, you got that right. There was always these two concurrent scenes going on, at first it was the punks vs. the Hollywood hard rock hair people, then the European influenced thrash bands took the punk’s place. Sometimes, stupid club bookers would force us to play together, not a good idea. We did not like them, it was almost a gangland sort of thing, I had punk-thrash friends who would kick a glam-metaller’s ass every chance they got. I did not approve of this, but that’s the way it was.
Was it hard the metal bands getting shows? Were they overshadowed by the glam/hair outfits?
Pretty much, especially when slam pits got going in about 1984. Not to be confused with the slam-dancing/pogoing the punks did many years earlier. That is why alot of us went to San Francisco to play, they were much more open to our type of thing. Los Angeles was completly over-run with faggoty poser metal stuff. Mustaine use to call glam Gay L.A. Music.
What were the clubs that started opening their doors for metal at this point?
Two come to mind, the Woodstock, and Radio City, both in Anahiem (Orange County). Strangely enough, those two clubs were literally next door to each other. Another place was called Dancing Waters, down in a city called San Pedro, off the coast. Down the coast from there, in Long Beach was a place called Fender’s Ballroom. But the real mayhem occured in two places-the Olympic Auditorium and the Balboa Theater, both downtown. Not for the meek or timid, let me tell you.
Please tell us about your early musical experiences as musician! Was Sexist the very first band, that you’ve played in?
No, I had played in many outfits not worth mentioning, however I was a member of Armored Saint and Malice before that time. I even went down to Lars Ulrich’s place in an attempt to form a band in 1981, but he was such a shitty drummer I never called him again. Who would have thought? I also tried out out for W.A.S.P. but I guess Blackie didn’t think I was tall enough, lol!
How and when did Sexist form exactly? What about the musical background of singer Dan Mateik, guitarists Doug Pittam and Mark Anderson and drummer Robbie Blackmore? Robbie and Mark played in Energy before, correct?
Yes, Robbie and Mark and Dave had Energy before. I happened to catch one of their shows at the Troubador, and wasn’t impressed. Sexist was a band that Doug Pittam and his asshole brother Tommy had with Gilby Clark on bass originally, believe it ore not. Their band dissolved, so Doug and I re-started the band from scratch and Jake Williams ( E. Lee) was our first lead guitarist.
Before Mark joined the band your guitarist was Jake E. Lee, but he left the band to play for Ozzy, right? Did you consider him a talented guitarist by the way?
Yes, an amazing player, but he was incredibly arrogant. He was into punk rock however, so when I’d pick him up to drive down to Redondo to band practice, we would listen to the Germ’s first record, maybe some Ramones. He didn’t have a pot to piss in back then, had no money, car, or anything else. Just his axe and his Marshall half-stack. He was cool to me, but he treated Doug like shit. After he left to join Rough Cutt, before Ozzy, me and Doug hooked up with the three Energy guys somehow.
You released a four track demo including „Fire & Wind”, „Friday Night”, „The Jet Stream” and „Slice Of Life”, do you still recall, how was the demo recorded?
It was at a place called Total Access Recording in Redondo Beach, Doug was drunk thru most of it, but we got the tracks down somehow. By the way, I hated this stuff we were playing, but there just wasn’t anything else for me at that time.
Was it the first recordings experience for all of you?
For them, yes, for me, no. I was in a Led Zep wannabe band called Angeles when I was 19, about ’79 or ’80. My first recording experience was with them.
How would you describe the demo as a whole?
Interesting, though a lot of time wasted so certain members could go out and score some coke.
Through which channels was it spread around? I mean, did you send them to fanzines, radio stations, was it available at record stores and stuff?
I answered an ad in a newspaper called the Recycler where Brian Slagel was looking for bands to record. I sent him our demo when it was done, and it was as simple as that. He called me after that, and the rest is history.
How did Don Dokken end up becoming the producer of the demo?
Hate to say it, but he and Doug Pittam were partying buddys there in Redondo, so he asked him to help out with backround vox, and then he (Don) then took the bull by the horns and produced the whole thing. Maybe that isn’t fair of me, Doug did know Dokken for quite some time.
„Fire and Wind” was featured on the Metal Massacre III compilation, was it good opportunity drawing the fans attention to the band?
Actually, nothing really changed for the better. Immediately after MM III came out, Doug was fired from his own band for his chronic alcoholism. I didn’t want it that way, but the other guys would have it no other way.
How did you get the offer being featured on this legendary record at all?
Like I said above, it was really nothing more then sending Slagel our demo.
Did this feature open some doors for the band?
I wish I could say yes, but things within the band went to a downward spiral, after that. Our new singer, Robert Sykes, Mark, and Robbie Blackmore were adament. They no longer wanted to play with Doug, and they wanted to start a new project altogether- that being Letchen Grey.
In your opinion was Brian Slagel very supportive of young, unsigned, talented metal bands?
Of course, who else was there? There would be no Metallica, Slayer, or even Megadeth if it wasn’t for him. One could argue that Jon Zazula (Megaforce) had his place in getting unsigned metal bands recognition, and in a way that was true, but in L.A., it was all Brian. One thing of note, Brian turned down Agent Steel. Zazula was very interested and was gonna sign them originally, but couldn’t come up with the money John (Cyriss) wanted, so they went with Combat Records instead. I wasn’t in the band at that time, but I knew Juan, Chuck, and John very well, and kept in touch, so I knew what was going on. I was there to observe the drama when Juan and John left Abattoir to form A/S as well.
Why and when did the story of Sexist come into the end?
When Doug was fired, we scraped Sexist altogether, because it was his name, and morphed into Letchen Grey. Interesting side note, Doug and John Cyriss were good friends, they went to G.I.T.(Muscian’s Institute) together.
You joined Agent Steel, while Robbie and Mark founded Letchen Grey and released an Ep titled „Party Politics”, but what did Dan Mateik and Doug Pittam do? Were they also involved in several outfits?
Actually, I too was in L.G. for two years, a founding member, starting in late ’83, but I was never happy with what they were doing musically, so I left in late 1985. The only reason I stayed on with them at all was the women and drugs. Sad to say, but true. When John found out I was available again, he immediately called me. What Doug and Dan did afterward, I have no idea. I think they were both good guys, just not that talented.
Was Letchen Grey an improved line up of Sexist?
You might say that, however Mark on guitar in my opinion was a complete incompetent, one of the main reasons I left, aside from the crappy songs he was writing. Plus I was so musically incompatible with them. They loved Kiss, Bad Company, and Led Zeppelin-bands I can’t stand, while I really loved Slayer, the Sex Pistols, and the Dead Kennedys, they couldn’t understand why I loved those bands so much, a mystery to them.
As for you, please make the things clear, because I read, that you played in Malice too. Did you only help them out, were you a session musician? At which point was it exactly?
I played with them for two or three months in late ’81. It became more and more clear to me the more I worked with them that the guitarist Jay Reynolds was a complete jerkoff, and I was wasting my time. Sorry for the strong words, but its true. One need only read Mustaine’s (there I go, bringing him up again!) book where it mentions his bad experience with him to know what I’m talking about. Believe me, we are not exaggerating about this. No wonder they made only one album, on a major label no doubt, and still failed miserably. Last I heard of Reynolds, he was hired, then fired from Metal Church, then went to prison, for what I couldn’t tell you.
Do you still remember how and when did you join Agent Steel to replace George Robb? What was the problem with him?
The problem became evident when the band was recording the Mad Locust Rising EP in late 1985. The recording engineer informed John and Juan that the tracks Robb was putting down were barely usable in a professional capacity. John called me and asked if I was available to finish up the project, but I just didn’t have the time. They then went with what they had, but fired George soon after. A few months later, John called me after I left Letchen Grey, I then accepted, and joined the band. When the EP came out, they gave me full credit for being on the album, photo picture and all. I didn’t think that was fair to Robb, but that is how they wanted it. Abattoir had just done the same exact thing to Juan, on their first release on Combat.
Were there auditioned other bassists besides you or were you the first choice?
Nope, John didn’t waste any time. Once he found out I was available, that was it.
To which extent were you familiar with Agent Steel and with the previous bands of the members, such as Vermin, Sceptre (John Cyriis), Abattoir (John and Juan Garcia)? Were they kind of cult L. A. underground bands?
I knew all of them. I went with John when he auditioned for Scepter(on guitar). They were two brothers, the Sardos, who had that band. John ended up marrying their sister Layla,(yep, just like the Clapton song) and had a son with her. When that didn’t work out(both with the band Sceptor, and his marriage), John decided to switch to vocals, instead of guitar. The first band he sang with was Medusa, the same band that appeared on Metal Massacre III with Sexist. He quit them, and then joined Abattoir. He did the Screams from the Grave demo with them, then quit again. It was at this time I met Juan, very late 1983. It was also at this time Dave Mustaine happened to hear the Abattoir demo right as he began Megadeth. Cyris was his first choice as a singer. They got together for a few weeks to try and work things out, but I don’t think they clicked together very well. Dave was a heavy drug user at that time, and John wasn’t at all. Plus, they were both very strong, personality wise, they both had their own ideas as to how to proceed, song-content wise. This is an important piece of history many people don’t know, that John was gonna be in Megadeth, and I’m surprised Dave didn’t mention this in his book, as this was very significant. Megadeth and Agent Steel however did go on to have a friendship, being lablemates on Combat, and all. Juan is a very close friend of Mustaine to this day. John then had a brief fling with Vermin, in 1984, which I thought was a very good, heavy, fast band. He stayed with them for most of that year,but quit them because he thought they were too punk influenced(not a bad thing in my eyes at all), then got together with Juan, Chuck, and George, in August of 1984. Agent Steel was born.
Do you consider Abattoir as one of the first speed metal bands by the way?
Well, to be honest, no. But they were miles and miles ahead moving metal forward to the future then bands like Armored Saint and Malice which were stuck in the past. You mentioned Vermin, which I thought never got the credit they deserved. They were doing the crossover punk/thrash thing a full year and a half before anyone heard of D.R.I., or Stormtroopers of Death. I would say that the first speed metal songs were as follows: alot of Judas Priest’s Sin after Sin album, Exciter on the Stained Class album, and He’s a woman, She’s a man on Scorpion’s Taken by Force album. Also, much of the Virgin Killer record. Those were the songs where it really all began, but I must mention also the first two Iron Maiden records. That was what really lit a fire under everyone’s ass, so to speak. But really, that title belongs to Judas Priest and Exodus.
Do you think, that Agent Steel made their mark incorporating all the aggressive elements of the Bay Area Thrash scene with soaring vocals inspired by Metal gods Judas Priest and Iron Maiden?
I think the Bay Area thing in the media was a bit over-generalized. They lumped everything going on in California in one place, and it just wasn’t that way. I mean, really, the bands that changed the world forever came from Los Angeles, that is just a straight-out fact. With the exception of Exodus.You hear about the so-called Big Four of thrash. Anthrax is one of those bands out of default. We –Agent Steel may of been one of those bands, but lost our place because we fucked-up so badly in a critcal time when we (and our management) should have been making better business decisions. I may get strong and violent disagreement on this, but that is how I see it. Thrash metal was borne and bred in Los Angeles, that is a fact that some need to deal with. The other cities-New York, and San Francisco, copied us. Again, Exodus being the exception. They were at it a long time, they were one of the first, and they deserve all the credit they get, if not more so. I think they deserve to be one of the Big Four over Anthrax too, my opinion, kids don’t get excited –lol! Now, I’m talking about modern thrash as we know it, not the earlier influences like Venom, Priest, or Motorhead.
In fact, Kerrang magazine dubbed Agent Steel, Iron Maiden on speed, right?
Yep, they sure did. I was always trying to get the guys to do the song Iron Maiden(from their first album) Agent Steel style. That would have been a hoot, don’t ya think?
What was your debut at all? I mean, did you perform some shows to check out your skills before you started writing the material for the second album titled Unstoppable Force?
Naa, they knew full well what my skills were. I’d known Chuck and John for five years by that point, and we had tried many projects together before this. When I joined, it was straight into a writing situation, immediately. No time wasted. They needed material for a new album post-haste. The song Unstoppable Force is my music alone, with John’s lyrics. Everything else on that record was a collaboration between all five of us. My first show with them wasn’t until we began our first European tour. It was in Antwerp, Belgium, and it was a disaster. It was in this old airplane hanger they turned into a venue, solid concrete everywhere, even the ceiling. Terrible acoustics. On stage, it sounded horrible, we could barely hear each other properly. But it was what it was, and we got thru it.
How about the song composing considering Unstoppable Force? Was the material ready when you joined them or did you have a big hand in the songwriting?
See above. I would say they gave me a lot of freedom to contribute. They had some ideas ready to go, but nothing complete. A lot of re-arraingment going on.
Have you recorded some pre-production demo and stuff? Did Combat ask you to hear the newer material before you entered the studio or did they still have complete confidence into it?
Yes they did request pre-production, but we went straight in, and banged that record out as we saw fit. Combat was gonna take what we gave them whether they liked it, or not. We had our vision, and we wern’t going to compromise on any level. As it turned out, I’m glad they saw it our way in the end.
How long did it take to write Unstoppable Force?
The writing part was very quick, we had a lot of ideas that went together fast. Recording it took some time, as we had to interrupt the process to go on tour. Plus, when we got back, John pulled some shit which I will get into later.
The album was recorded at the legendary Morrisound Studios in Tampa, what made you to record the material in Florida?
That was John’s idea. He wanted to be there for inspirational reasons.
Is it correct, that the band moved to Florida that John and Chuck wanted being closer to the Bermuda triangle?
Well, we didn’t move there to record, just stayed for the duration of the work being done, but later on, (early 1987) those two did, and I’ll address that very issue later on in the interview.
Unstoppable Force was one of the first records (besides Nasty Savage’s debut), that was recorded at the Morrisound Studios, would you say, that was a kind of work preference (preference work) of Scott Burns considering the future?
No, it was entirely John and Juan’s choice.
How did the recording sessions go? Can you tell us detailed about it?
It was alright, John was the most professional in that situation than I ever saw him, before, or after. Us four in the band were sharp as a knife, our parts didn’t take too long to record at all. Our recording and mixing engineer, Tom Morris really knew how to get the best out of us as well. One of the things he would do is write different shit on Chuck’s drum heads like ’’HIT ME HARD YOU FAG!’’ to motivate him to pound loud and hard for the sound he was after. We lived in the Embassy Suites in downtown Tampa for that month and a half, but boy did we ever rack-up a bill staying there. I remember that time, it was March of ’86, Metallica had just released Master of Puppets. Juan and I found a record store in town, and bought a tape of it, we just had to know what they were up to. He and I were impressed, John thought it sucked. It figured, he was listening to nothing but Queensryche at that point. Also, the guys in Nasty Savage use to come by our suite and hang out. Very cool dudes, we went to parties they had going on in their hometown of Brandon, good times.
The band interrupted the recording for a few months to tour in Europe, you toured through the month of May with Anthrax and Overkill where the split video US Speed Metal Attack was recorded, what do you recall of this tour? Did you get on well with those bands?
Well, here’s the thing- when young, up and coming bands like the three of us are thrown together like that-same tour bus, same hotels, many times same eateries, same everything, there’s going to be be competition, we all had everything to prove. Plus, we didn’t know them, nor they us. So with that, there is going to be a lot of tension as well. I wish I could say we all got along, but not really. From the start, there was this New York vs West Coast attitude thing, also Megaforce vs Combat type of shit, but to be fair, alot of the crap was started more by their tour managers and crew members then the bands themselves. It certainly didn’t help that when John gets into a position where he feels threatened,or mocked, he gets very belligerant and in your face. John also brung over a friend of his that did nothing but cause problems. He use to push him over to fuck with Anthrax’s guitar tech, a very shy, nerdy, jewish kid named Irv. It was like school at times, a bunch of kids fucking with and teasing each other. Every one of us were 24 and under. Personally, I thought Charlie, Frank, and Joey from Anthrax were very cool guys, but I found Scott Ian off-putting and a bit of a stuck-up douche. The biggist asshole of all was a crew member that Overkill brought with them, a complete obnoxious, incendiary jerkoff. I have no idea what this guy’s problem with us was, he did everything he could to get us thrown off the tour, and start shit with us time after time unnecessarily. But all in all, I wouldn’t have missed it for the world, it was an experience very few people get to enjoy.
Was it an opportunity that you couldn’t miss out? Did the tour, the shows help the band getting new fans?
That tour projected us into a spotlight none of us had ever dreamed of, it was surreal. We felt like the Beatles, everyone was so enthusiastic and rabid about what we were doing. Constant photography flash in our faces, everywhere we went.We could do no wrong in their eyes. I kind of think the other two bands were jealous of the attention we were getting over them. Success for us at that point was easily obtainable, all we had to do was let it happen. Sad to say, we didn’t.
You returned in June to finish recording the album and it was released in 1987 due to delays in the recording sessions, what happened? What kind of reasons did lead to the delay at all?
It was at this point John became more and more difficult. He was holding the record company hostage, and was refusing to complete his vocals unless they came up with more money for him alone. In a word, he became greedy. He had them over a barrel, and took advantage of the situation. When he gets that way, there is no getting thru to him on any sensible level either.
Do you think, that the most improved aspect on this album compared to their debut album has got to be the guitar work, there are many more riffs in the songs, and no two songs are structured the same nor sound the same?
Oh absolutely. The first album’s music was very raw, basic, and punk-influenced, as four of the original members-everyone but John, were into punk rock. When Bernie came in, the song writing changed dramatically, he and John were much more on the same page as for more melodic arraingements.
Is the dual guitar approach of Juan Garcia and Bernie Versailles a highlight of the album? Are both their high-energy riffs and their slick soloing extremely memorable and catchy?
Yes, they became the new dual guitar team to follow in the footsteps of KK Downing & Glen Tipton, or Dave Murray and Adrian Smith. Juan and I however, really liked the dual guitar work done in Thin Lizzy as well, and emulated harmonies and soloing as such. I myself am to this day in awe of the work those two came up with, and am proud to have been a part of what they were doing. I am a fan of them both, and love them as good friends to this day.
The overall song composition is very well executed, right?
I would say yes, considering being on Combat and Music For Nations,(no major label) we sold untold numbers of records, so we must have been doing something right. I am very proud of what we did, wouldn’t change a thing.
How do you view, that the songwriting is catchy and contains loads of dynamics, the band knows when to slow it down to create a good song and when to speed it up?
Let me put it this way, Juan, Bernie, and I had that special connection that just worked wonders, its hard to explain, all I can say is that the writing chemistry was so right on, so perfect. Very rare to have that going on.
Are drum and bass magnificently done here, with a fair amount of fast double bass and grooving rhythms and both instruments are clearly listenable (audible)?
Yep, just listen to that record. With George Robb(not to slag him at all) the bass was barely audible. For needed reasons, I guess. With U.F., that changed, to much more over-driven bass and drums carrying things along. I felt that Chuck and myself could really kick people’s asses when we really got going.
What do you think about, that the bass has a rich organic tone and your work here is impeccable and highly memorable, and you almost has the same presence as the guitars?
It was all part of the vision we had. I played with Juan and Bern as part of a three-guitar team, if you will. I am always right there, riffing right along with them, it is all in my style of playing. Just like with my current band. There is very excellent bass work in the title track and Never Surrender for example… Well, thank you I tried. I can’t stand boring bass lines-drives me nuts.
Do you agree with, that compared to the debut only the speed was reduced a bit gets a lot more melodic?
We wanted to try many different ideas for Unstoppable. It was make or break time for us at that point, we needed to prove that we could do anything. Every song had to be outstanding, and no crappy filler material was acceptable, wouldn’t have it any other way. As it turned out, this was our seminal work.
How did The Ripper end up becoming on the Japanese version of the album?
That was a choice of the satellite record/distributor over there. We really didn’t have a say in that.
Were all of you satisfied with the end result or would you have changed something on the record?
Except for the very few clinks and mistakes my ears can hear on those recordings, I would say otherwise, nothing. We are very proud of our end product, and it stands the test of time.
Both Agent Steel album are excellent, classic heavy/speed masterpieces and the band succeeded in leaving its mark on the scene, correct?
I would say yes, but I want to be humble here, and not an arrogant jerk off. At the end of the day, we were writing and playing to please us. We wanted to put out music we would go out, buy, and enjoy ourselves, let alone anyone else. But we managed to impress alot of our peers as well. There also are a bunch of young bands now that tell us how much what Bernie, Juan, and myself did to impact their lives.
What were the shows in support of the record? How did they go compared to the previous ones?
Well, I wish I could say. Unstoppable Force was released in mid 1987. The lineup that recorded it had broken apart at that point. Juan, Bernie, and myself were doing other things by then. It was John and Chuck alone with new guys supporting it.
Internal difficulties forced Juan, Bernie, and you from the fold, what happened? Were the problems unavoidable or…?
This is how it happened-like I mentioned before, when it came time to finish the record, John was holding Combat hostage for more money. This was creating strife between us and him. We then did a showcase for no less then 7 or 8 major labels. At the end of the showcase, the same A&R guy from Capitol Records who signed Megadeth approached us, and shook all our hands, saying he thought we were great, and that he would get in touch. This was in December of ’86. Over the next several weeks they were in negotiations with our our management, and with Combat over money matters I won’t get into here. There was a pending deal going on.(unknown to most of us in the band). John then, out of the blue gave all of us band members a call, demanding that we move to Florida. We tried to talk him out of this foolishness, it was a piss-poor excuse to disrupt a successful band’s career for all the wrong reasons, but he wouldn’t listen. And it would have been nice if our management talked some sense into him, but they did no such thing, as a matter of fact, they enabled him.These were the people hired to know better, they were the adults in the situation. But they had the mistaken belief that John WAS the band, and thought everyone else was expendable. What complete, fucking idiots they were. How wrong could they possibly be? Juan, I, and Bernie, we had girlfriends, our families, and lives based in L.A., we mulled this nonsense over as to what to do, but we had no choice. By the way, the three of us were kept in the dark by them as to what was going on with Capitol, but we heard nothing, until long after the fact. So we told John, if that is where you want to go, then go, we are not interested, and this whole thing is very unfair and selfish of you. So he and Chuck went to Florida, and that was that. When Capitol got wind of this whole situation, they pulled the deal. They wern’t interested in us if we were this unstable and dysfuntional. John and Chuck re-formed the band, they did one more tour of Europe, then Agent Steel broke apart for good.
How would you describe personally John Cyriis whom I consider as one of the best singers of all time and who is my absolute favourite one? Why was it hard getting well with him?
I liked John. He was a fan of my talents, as was I of his. He is one of those rare people that the very same gifts he has, also drive him to destructive impulses. He would give me a place to stay, if I needed it, like any good friend would, but could be the most ridiculous, irrational, paranoid, out of control asshole ever. And usually over small issues that amounted to basically nothing. Another thing with him is, he has a tendency to be very selfish in his choices and movements without considering the other people involved. He is by complete definition, an enigma.
Richard Bateman, James Murphy and Jay Weslord joined the band, did you follow the band’s career?
At the time, no, wasn’t interested. It wasn’t until much later Chuck gave me some videos of their shows in London, and elsewhere.
What did you do after your departure from Agent Steel? Did you join The Mofo Homeboys right after that?
No, Bernie and I formed a project called Phobia that lasted a year. When that folded, he wanted to do other things, and I really wanted to do something more hardcore punk oriented. The Mofos approached me, so I joined up.
What about this band and their Peace In Anarchy demo as a whole? How did they sound like?
They were what you would call a ’’crossover’’ band I guess. I recorded both of their demos, with a bunch of my material thrown in, along with some Black Flag covers. We had an interesting sound, our vocalist Tom Baile sounded a lot like Kurt Cobain,(Nirvana) and Mike Ness of Social Distortion. The band’s music sounded like what Sick of it All does, only more sped-up. I thought they(the demos) turned out really well, Brian Slagel was very interested, but nothing became of that. This went on from 1988 to 1991. When I first heard Nirvana’s Nevermind record, I thought to myself Whoa! he sounds a hell of a lot like Tom!
The band usually played Agent Steel’s The Day at Guyana, correct?
Yes, but looking back, I don’t know why. We had plenty of our own material to go with, so we certainly didn’t need to go with that. I think they talked me into it because it wasn’t my idea. I had moved on (from A/S) by that point.
The Mofo Homeboys disbanded in 1991, did you follow what’s going on in the metal world, in the underground? Did the new trends (grunge, pop/punk, nu metal) almost kill the traditional metal?
I had quit playing for a while at that point, but I did follow Nirvana and Soundgarden, and the new crop of death metal, grindcore bands. I really liked what they were doing. And, yes, I think music fans had had enough of the hair-metal thing, for very good reasons, but Megadeth, Slayer, and Metallica went on to even bigger things in the Ninties, and I say good for them. Plus, you can’t deny all that was going on in Norway and Sweden at that time. Also the rise of bands like Death, Obituary, Cryptopsy, Cannibal Corpse, Nalpalm Death, and of course, Sepultura. Metal never went away, it was dormant for a time, but look, we have Lamb of God, Norma Jean, Slipknot, and a host of others, doing it up now.
Do you think, that a lot of bands lost the thread and started playing something new that wasn’t familiar with their original approach, such as Metallica, Megadeth, while a lot of bands got on hold or fell apart?
Sadly yes, Metallica totally lost it, in my opinion, and never got it back. Megadeth has been touch and go, some of the stuff Dave comes up with are alright, some-well, not so much. Slayer, on the other hand, has kept it going, who would have thought that these four green kids I saw playing the Troubador at one of their first shows would become one of my all-time favorites. Consistantly so.
After 10 years hiatus (silence) Agent Steel regrouped in 1998 with Bernie Versailles and Juan Garcia on guitars, you on bass, Chuck Profus on drums and Bruce Hall on vocals, how did you get together again? What were the background of the reformation?
Those three just called me one day, so I invited them to my home, we talked, then I helped them audition vocalists.
A lot of cult ’80s bands started working again at this point, such as Metal Church, Nasty Savage, Necrodeath etc., how did you view this?
I thought it was a good thing, I mean, why not? As long as you can still pull in a significant number of fans to your shows, then go for it. But they should have as many of the original members as possible, otherwise it becomes just a cover band.
Did you feel, that you found the perfect replacement in the person of Bruce Hall considering being the new singer?
I liked him as a person, but to be honest, I am not a big fan of his voice, but remember, this is my opinion, and the type of music I am now into isn’t really driven by the vocals anyway, so you should take that for what its worth. That said, I think he did a good job for what they did for ten years, and I do love the Omega Conspiracy album.
You recorded three demos (Agents Of Steel – including New Godz, Into The Machine, Fighting Backwards, Bleed Forever – 1998, a second demo – including Deny The Poison and Eradicate – also in 1998 and the Deny The Poison demo – including Deny the Poison, Eradicate, New Godz, Into the Nowhere, Fighting Backwards and Bleed Forever – 1999, how would you sum up these recordings? How did you write the songs?
Well, I have to be honest, I had left the project by that point, and wasn’t involved in any of those, as a matter of fact I had left California by that point too. Karlos Medina did the bass chores. He and I talked, and I gave him my complete blessing. He has done more with the band then I have, and I think the world of him, a truly talented and great guy. He however, is not in the band anymore too, and is now a cardiological examiner in a clinic in a California town named Temecula.
As for the first demo, some internet versions of the demo add the Black Sabbath cover version Sweet Leaf, but that is taken from the Hell Rules tribute album and was not part of the official demo, wasn’t it?
Don’t know, I wasn’t there.
Were all of these demos sent to labels to attract labels interests?
Probably.
The comeback record of the band was released in 1999 titled Omega Conspiracy, but why didn’t you play on this album? Why did you leave them again?
You have to understand that when they approached me, I was 38 years old and was pretty burned out. At that time, I had been slugging it out in the music business for 22 years,and after my previous project at that time which I had just spent 3 1/2 years, and a lot of time and money with had fizzled out, I had had enough. I had already bought property in Arizona(where I am now) and already had a job waiting for me there, and was about to get married and start a new life. You reach a point when you are tired of being broke, and not having anything, and putting in tons of hard work, your time, blood, sweat, and tears, all for nothing. Also, for all the records, CDs and what not that Agent Steel sold, I have yet to see a penny of it. Back then, our corrupt managment had us all sign promisary notes without the oversight of a good attorney, or even our parents, but we were dumb young kids-what the hell did we know? And I realize that time and again in this interview I keep bringing up things our managment did,or didn’t do, but it always seemed like at every important junction in our career, they did the wrong thing. Always. All that said, I love O.C., the material is excellent, and I wish I could have been a part of it. If they had asked me one or two years earlier, I’d have been all for it and right there with them. Totally bad timing again.
In your opinion, did it become a classic album too? Did it satisfy the needs of the Agent Steel fans? How do you view the other Agent Steel albums Order Of The Illuminati and Alienigma?
O.C. absolutly is, the other two, time will tell. But thats just me, a little too melodic for my taste.
Are you aware of John Cyriis returned to them?
Yes, but it is my understanding that he is already out of the picture, things didn’t work out after they toured Japan. They already are recording with a new singer named Rick, and sadly, they are having difficulties using the name Agent Steel again. Which to me is a joke. John never came up with the name ’’Agent Steel’’ a mutual friend of ours by the name of Brett Phillips did.
Mike, how would you sum up your career as a whole? What were the highlights and the lowpoints of your career?
My career as a whole, well, for obvious reasons I wish the payoff would have matched the hard work and effort put in, but I’m not complaining. I would have done the same thing again, but I wish I knew then about some things what I know now. A real low point for me was the last 6 months I was in Letchen Grey. I was beyond disappointed that after two years, and much gigging and recording, nothing much was really happening. I was seriously drug and alcohol addicted, I was depressed that I chose to score some coke or some crank instead of bettering myself musically as well as building my career. I was constantly going to jail that year(’85), drug possession, drunk driving, traffic warrants, assault and battery, all kinds of shit. I was also very unhappy with what we were doing in that band song wise, and it was not really their fault, they loved what they were doing, it just wasn’t my thing, the Sunset Strip hair metal scene. But that band did give some very high points, for what it was, we drew a lot of people to our shows, and it was fun in its own way. Agent Steel was of course, the very high point(when we were kicking-ass successful) and the very lowest, when we broke up. What was so pathetic was, we didn’t go out with a BANG as much as a whimper. Truly sad for the fans, let alone us. I use to be very bitter and angry at John, but no longer. Everything happens for a reason, I guess, but one can’t help but imagine what could have been. You have to move on, or go crazy.
Are you proud of playing (taking part) in Agent Steel?
My proudest ever. And let me say this, I am proud of people like you Les, and everyone who loved our band and loves thrash metal in general. This very Easter weekend about 275 miles west of me in Coachella California , the Big Four played. Juan was there backstage sending pics and videos to us on Facebook and it was crazy packed with thrash metal heads from all over. Those bands are almost 30 years old, and yet they still draw tons of people. Most of them young kids, like my 19 year old niece who was there, and her boyfriend. Yes, that does make me proud and happy. I like to think we, and the other bands in our genre, took what punk rock and English metal started, and took it to entirely new levels.
Thanks a lot for the interview, anything to add, that I forgot to mention?
Just one thing. (ok, maybe two). You haven’t heard the last of me yet. After twelve years of inaction, I was approached by some good friends of mine-the band Unforseen, to join up. They are Phoenix’s top thrash metal kings, my two guitarists and lead vocalist are half my age, but who cares?(bigtime Agent Steel fans btw). We can be found on Facebook either my page, or the Unforseen page there. Or go to unforseenonline.com. Incredible music, you just won’t believe how awesome this band is. Our upcoming CD release was produced and mastered by none other then our very own Bernie Vesailles. And let me just say that Les, you really did your homework on this, and came up with some very smart and well-thought out questions. And I wish you much success. One more thing, some of the comments said by me may seem more than a little harsh, and to the point, but everyone who really knows me knows what an opinionated bastard I am. I just call it as I see it. Some of my friends say (and also my wife) I am a music snob. Maybe thats true too.