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12/15/2017 0 Comments

The Hounds Of Jezebel Take Las Vegas

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by Carl C. Sundberg
April 2016


 
When The Hounds of Jezebel get the party started, they get the party started right.
 
As the Vinyl in the Hard Rock Hotel in Las Vegas began to fill for the Awards Ceremony on the final night of the 2016 RadioContraband Convention, Lou Brutus and The Hounds of Jezebel were just starting the song that would become the theme of the night. We're not talking some auto-tuned diva in a ball gown, no princess chart-topper squeezing out some putrid glitter hit to a bunch of suits checking their smart phones.
 
No. This was not how the night would proceed.
 
This night was for rock. And the song, well it was a song so vulgar, so off the charts profane, that it could never be played on the radio without heavy editing and near constant beeps. It was raw. Fast. Loud. And no one was prepared for it.
 
With the help from their good friend, Mr. Lou Brutus, host of the nationally-syndicated Hard Drive radio show, who was dressed in a tuxedo with the tails, The Hounds of Jezebel, fronted by the maniacal Brutus, unleashed the thunder and kicked out their jam in full punk rock fashion, complete with a Johnny Rotten-esque accent, “If I Don't Win My Award Tonight, You Can All Go Fuck Yourself”.
 
The crowd all turned to the stage. Did that just happen? Yes. Yes, it did. By the end of the song, the entire room, all these bands and veterans in the rock industry, they were singing along. It was the greatest start to any awards show that has ever taken place in the history of the world.
 
“That is a pretty funny story how that all came about,” recalls John Curry, singer and guitarist of Hounds of Jezebel. “Lou knew we would be playing first that night and having never met him, he called me up to see if we would be interested in doing this song he had written lyrics for. We had never met, and I told the guys in the band about it. They were like 'Is he gonna send us a copy to rehearse?' and I told them he just had lyrics and we'd figure it out when we got to Vegas. A little reluctant we agreed we'd give it a try. So, we get to Vegas on Thursday and meet with Lou at the bar before the kickoff party and he tells us the lyrics while we all break out in laughter.'

'We all start drinking and never discuss it again the rest of the night thinking we'd have plenty of time at soundcheck! Well......as we all know......shit runs behind when production is involved and needless to say we had literally about 5 minutes before the show started to put it together!! I think it went pretty well all things considering! Lou is a great guy and we had a blast doing it!”

That was just the beginning of a crazy night in Vegas for the Hounds. After wrapping up the awards show with a raging set, things got crazy for Hounds of Jezebel. Well, for Mr. Curry at least. Perhaps you've seen the Facebook clip of him passed out in his underwear outside the hotel elevators. Maybe not. Either way, we'll get to that tale soon enough.

The Hounds of Jezebel, as you can imagine, make you believe in rock again. They don't pull punches and they aren't afraid of crossing the line. They rock like a band is supposed to. Full tilt. Balls out. Pure Rock Fury. Just like a band from Houston, Texas should. “There are a lot of great bands in Houston,” says Curry. “The thing with Houston is that it's so spread out that it's sometimes hard to put on big shows because everyone is spread out everywhere. You can literally play North and have a totally different crowd than when you play South or East or West. We generally try to do at least one big centralized show about every 3 months to get all of our fans in one place. If you play too much people take it for granted and stop coming, so if you make the show a special event that doesn't happen every week you usually get a great crowd.”

Starting sometime in 2012, Hounds of Jezebel is still a relatively young band, but that doesn't mean this is their first rodeo. “We were all in different bands,” recalls Curry as he explains their early days. “Mike Neyra, our drummer and Chris Loveless, our guitarist were in Earshot and then Daniel Willis, our bass player and myself actually played for Scott Stapp. We all had similar displeasing experiences and after everything fell apart I came back to Houston. I didn't play music for like 2 years, but it was really taking a negative toll on personal life. I called a friend to see if he'd be interested in jamming and he had too much on his plate but told me about two guys that were looking to do something. We had never met but got together at one of my acoustic shows, so they could see me sing. I guess they dug it because literally the next day we wrote a check for a rehearsal space and wrote 6 songs in 6 days. The rest is history!”

The story of the band's name is kind of funny according to Curry. “First of all, every band knows how hard it is to come up with a name. We were no different. I'd say 3 months in we were still getting nowhere and when I say nowhere we had some pretty shitty ideas. One day I was talking with my wife and she recommended something to do with animals or the earth. I loved Hounds. I liked The Hounds of the Baskervilles and was wanting something similar. I was laying on the couch one day watching 'Waterboy' and when his mother said, 'Sep some godless Jezebel like you' a lightbulb went off!!! Hounds of Jezebel!!! I remembered her being in the bible but after reading the story of dogs eating her body after her death I loved it even more!!! I went to rehearsal to convince the guys that this was it!!! They were not impressed to say the least. I told everyone to leave practice that night and ask at least 5 or 10 people what they thought, and we would reconvene at the next rehearsal. Well apparently, everyone loved it and Hounds of Jezebel was born. The name definitely grew on everyone and now it's who we are!”

Their sonic fingerprints are diverse, but familiar and firmly rooted in a bluesy-grooved, whiskey-soaked gospel thunder, belting out sweaty anthems, meaty riffs and sorrowful ballads that would fit perfectly in any southern bar at last call. The Hounds of Jezebel weave tunes for the beer drinkers and hell raisers of the world.

“We definitely aren't reinventing the wheel or doing anything totally different,” admits Curry.  “But I do think we have our own sound that's all ours. You can definitely hear 90's, Southern Rock, Blues, and maybe sometimes a touch of country! At the end of the day we are fans of music so what you hear is what you get. I know that each of us have been influenced by many different artists and if you hear an influence here or there it's our way of saying thanks!”

When it comes to songwriting Curry's ego doesn't get in the way of a good story, although at times his writing gets a little personal. “I read a lot about current events and history and stuff and usually from a lyrical standpoint use that,” Curry says. “There are the occasional autobiographical songs though. Those guys make it pretty easy to write. They come up with such cool music and I close my eyes and picture how it makes me feel, I tell a story and then voila. It usually comes together pretty effortlessly! We truly love writing music together!”

Their first album - “Vol. 1” - was released in 2012 and on April 1st of this year, they celebrated the unleashing of their next release, “The Shakedown” a five-song EP, in their hometown of Houston, TX with a rowdy EP Release Show at The Last Concert Cafe.  “We really feel like the songs on this EP are really showing the growth in our sound compared to our first release,” says Curry. “So far we've been getting the same response from our fans!!! It really means a lot when you really take your time creating something special to you, and everyone else takes notice and feels it's just as special to them as it is to us!!!! As far as the show the night of the release...WE ALWAYS ROCK!”
 
One of the highlights of that EP Release Show was the debut of the Hounds' first video, “The Shakedown” which involves a pretty epic trainwreck and lots of fire set to the rippin' title track of their new EP. “We have this old RV that we wanted to burn down, and I contacted the city to see how we could do that legally and shoot a live performance video around it,” recalls Curry. “Well we ended up finding this other location with train cars off of the track and turned over school buses that looked like the Zombie Apocalypse! We just wanted to do a live performance that didn't look like every other band's live performance video and I think we accomplished that! It was an amazing shoot! All of the people involved, cast and crew, were absolutely amazing to work with!”

Now, about that video of John Curry sleeping in his underwear outside the elevators at the Hard Rock Hotel in Las Vegas...

“That same Thursday night we had the kickoff party, where we met you as well, and being a rock band from Texas we like to drink,” remembers Curry. “Unfortunately for me, sometimes when I drink I sleep walk. We had been partying and the guys were tired, so they went to bed and I went to sit at the Poker tables. I got back to the room around 3 am and went to bed.  At some point I got up to use the restroom - asleep - and after finishing instead of taking a left back to the bed, I took a right and walked right out of the room in my underwear. I continued to sleep walk all the way down the hall and post up on the couch right in front of the elevators!!!!  The guys found me at around 8am sleeping on the couch in my underwear right in front of the casino elevators!!!  So, they took video of me and posted it online! Guess sometimes what happens in Vegas makes its way to the internet!!!”

Originally published on radiocontraband.com

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12/15/2017 1 Comment

Dirty but Not Unclean: The Holy White Hounds

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by Carl C. Sundberg
April 2016

If the Holy White Hounds were a stock, you'd invest. So many bands come out and get tagged with the “buzz-worthy” label, but this time...this time it's different. Holy White Hounds deserve it. Their feral name best described in their bio by singer and guitars Brenton Dean: “We're dirty but we're not unclean. We're mangy, but you'd still let us sleep in your bed.” With their unique look, their peculiar vibe and infectious grooves, the quartet from Iowa are about to launch into the stratosphere of the rock world like a magnificent laser beam of glory.  Why? It's the songs, stupid. Take a listen to their wild, quirky single, “Switchblade” from their upcoming debut album, “Sparkle Sparkle”, which has whiffs of Beck, the swagger of Beastie Boys, the fuzzy punk thunder of Queens of the Stone Age and an epic guitar solo that would turn Jimmy Page's head. And that's just one song. Every other song is completely different, utterly surprising, refreshing and fun and just as hard to explain. And every single song even more infectious as the last.
 
Hailing from an unlikely place for rock stardom – Des Moines, Iowa – Holy White Hounds might have never been heard of. That is, of course, if you forgot that a little band called Slipknot also hails from Des Moines. Which was a trip for the band growing up. “Slipknot is a hometown treasure for a lot of people,” explains Brenton Dean. “Around my high school there was always rumors of who went to our school from Slipknot, and I had friends who worked delivering pizzas who would swear they once delivered to one of their houses.  Up until their other projects where they took off the masks most people still had no idea what they looked like.  It was funny wondering if Corey Taylor might be lurking around the corner and you wouldn't know because- what does he look like?  Slipknot worked so hard to get where they are that I think they are such an inspiration to Iowa kids and musicians because they show others what is possible.”
 
As cool as it was that they lived in the same city as Slipknot, the music that Brenton Dean was into was a bit different. “In the early years I really liked a lot of pop punk, Warped Tour style bands,” recalls Dean. “I was up late one night in 9th grade and saw Ben Kweller perform live on Craig Kilborn. That was a performance that really changed things for me. Shortly after I got The Hives' 'Veni Vidi Vicious', and became pretty obsessed with The Beatles and my tastes expanded quite a bit.  Always been a big fan of Beastie Boys as well.”
 
“Music was always something that just helped me to climb out of a shell,” Dean continues. “I would never dream of dancing at a wedding or anything like that, but with a guitar on stage I felt like I could move any way I wanted.  Also realizing I could say things in a song that people would accept in song form that I couldn't say in real life... that really turned me on too. I think the freedom music brought with it was what inspired me to play first.”
 
It was 2005 when Brenton Dean started Holy White Hounds with childhood friend and bassist Ambrose Lupercal.  As kids, the two were tight and informally played music around town, becoming buzz-worthy even back then. During this formative stage, Brenton and Ambrose had encountered producer Brandon Darner who produced Imagine Dragons, Radio Moscow and Envy Corps and earned his respect. They didn’t contact him until years later, after they were out of college, and got him to produce their debut album, “Sparkle Sparkle” due out in May. But we'll get to that soon enough.
 
The band gained traction the old-fashioned way – playing as many live shows locally as they could. And in time, the crowds grew. “Like most bands, when we started we played a lot of hometown shows,” says Dean. “Our friends and family have always been very supportive of us and would come to a lot of our shows.  But then people started coming to shows that I didn't recognize.  I remember one show where people were actually cheering for us before we started playing. That was something that never happened before.  It was a very cool moment for us.”
 
It wasn't until 2014 when the band started to get airplay on their local rock radio station, powerhouse KAZR in Des Moines, that things started to really pick up steam. An unofficial national campaign around the single, “Switchblade” began to form. “Ambrose was emailing back and forth with our local station and talking to them about dropping off a demo and asked me to take our EP [Oh Mama] down to the station,” says Dean. “We met up to hang out with Andy and Ryan from Lazer 103.3 and they were very kind to us and just fun to hang out with.  They helped us out giving us some radio play and even introduced us to our managers.  We have big love for those guys.”
 
The band continued to build momentum, showing up on the rock homepage of iTunes as a New Artist Spotlight and Apple has added them to the “Ones to Watch” playlist. In May, Holy White Hounds will unleash their debut album, “Sparkle Sparkle”, which was produced by – you guessed it – Brandon Darner and engineered by Micah Nuterra at Sonic Factory Studios in the band's hometown of Des Moines.
 
Behind the scenes, Dean, being an impatient type of guy, was anxious and wanted to get things done quickly, but that wasn't in the cards. “The original plan was to go in and record all the songs live and do very minimal dubbing at the end,” says Dean.  “When we completed the live performances, and looked at what we had, we shifted our plans to take a bit more time with overdubs and searching for specific tones we wanted. It just took a long time to make it. For a lot reasons. It's a good thing we had a producer because I am not super patient when it comes to searching out the perfect tone and stuff like that.  But in the end the time we took really paid off and we have 'Sparkle Sparkle' in all of its sonic glory.”
 
One thing that seems to permeate the album, in addition to the killer tracks, is a strange, unique sense of humor, which wasn't really expected going into the studio. “It gives songs with dark lyrics a weird feeling sometimes, which I like,” Dean explains.  “I thought we were going to polish things over to make them squeaky clean and to the point.  But our producer encouraged us to let our freak flags free in a couple moments of the record and I like how it came across.”
 
Holy White Hounds are poised for a prolific career at the rate they are writing. They haven't even released their first album, but that doesn't stop them from writing more music. “We try to make a habit of writing as much as possible,” says Dean. “It's easier to write when you do it a lot. I wrote the majority of 'Sparkle Sparkle', but Ambrose wrote most all the music in 'Switchblade', and 'In Your Skin', which are two of my favorite tracks on the album. We like to collaborate a lot.  Anymore with the lineup of Hounds being solidified to James [Manson, guitarst], Seth [Luloff, drums], Ambrose, and I...there really is no process.  Just a constant throwing at the wall of riffs, lyrics, and beats and seeing what sticks.”
 
So what's the secret to writing a great song? “No one has told me,” says Dean. “But if I were to guess –  if you write a song that you don't think you would listen to – don't expect other people to wanna listen to it.”

Originally published on radiocontraband.com

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12/14/2017 0 Comments

Getting Serious With Hellyeah

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by Carl C. Sundberg
June 2016


There was a time when the band Hellyeah, the supergroup of sorts featuring Vinnie Paul, drummer of Pantera and Damageplan and Chad Grey, vocalist of Mudvayne, conjured up visions of partying, getting tore up on a Saturday night, getting a little ass, a little alcohol, a little weed, hell, maybe a fight, who knows. Basic “Hell Yeah!” Behavior. But what happens when a band sheds that good times  mentality and goes a little deeper, a little darker? You get one of the most powerful albums of the band's career. For Hellyeah that's just what went down on their latest release, “Unden!able”. The album features, in addition to some of the most powerful songs the band has ever written, a cover of Phil Collin's “I Don't Care Anymore” that also happens to have the guitar work of Vinnie Paul's brother - the late, great “Dimebag” Darrell Abbott. A few weeks back, we caught up with former Nothingface guitarist and co-founder of Hellyeah, Tom Maxwell at Rock on the Range 2016 in Columbus, OH before their set. We talked about the genius behind the band's name, the diehard nature of their fans, and how they left the party behind to get down and dirty on their new album, “Unden!able”.
 
Q: We're here at Rock on the Range 2016, tenth anniversary and I'm here with Tom Maxwell of Hellyeah!
 
Maxwell: Yayeah!
 
Q: Has that gotten old, when people are like, “Hell Yeah!” 
 
A: Nah. Everybody says it. I say it. You know what I mean.
 
Q: It's a genius name.
 
A: Best never ever, man.
 
Q: Everyone says it and they don't realize it until...
 
A: Wait til you hear the crowd today when they chant it and how badass it sounds.
 
Q: Yeah, I was gonna ask you, what's some of your favorite things to witness from the crowd?
 
A: Ah man. I obviously like to see action. Bodies flying around. Like last night, I saw this poor lady get out of the pit, man, she had her eye bashed wide open. Probably had to get stitches. They took her outside, and she was like, “Huh-uh, I'm going back in there and finish watching this fucking show and then we'll go to the hospital.”
 
Q: My old band opened for you guys in Eugene, OR a long time ago and there was a guy in the pit who had a compound fracture in his leg and he wouldn't go to the hospital because he wanted to watch the show.
 
A: I mean, c'mon!
 
Q: That's rock n roll.
 
A: That's it man, that's what it's all about.     
 
Q: Hellyeah seemed to start off almost like a side project in the beginning but it's definitely evolved into it's own thing. What's been the path like for you?
 
A: Personally, it's been a weird one in the beginning. This was kind of me and Chad's baby. I had a clear vision for what I wanted to do musically, as he did lyrically. Now when we all got together, there was a lot of excitement. A couple other people were brought in. It was great. Then the second and third records, for me, I don't have much imprint on those [albums], because I didn't get the music too much. It was getting “Alcohol and Ass-y” and “Drink, Drank, Drunk” and “Helluva Time” and all these like, to me, just like, shitty hillbilly rock. So fast forward to a couple, a few years ago and we parted ways with Greg [Tribbett, guitarist] and Bob [Zilla, bassist] and the whole sole responsibility of writing fell on me, I was like, 'fucking it is on now'. I get to do what I want to do without any other cooks in my goddamn kitchen. And that's what happened. “Blood for Blood” showed up. And now we're doing the same thing with “Unden!able” that's coming out. It's taken four records, nine years, to get to this point. But I'm happy and we're happy and everybody else is happy. Everybody's coming in, radio's coming to us. You know, we didn't write music for radio. We write for us. And the fact that they're coming to us is a good sign.
 
Q: The band's vibe has changed over the years and recently, it's become very serious. It's not that party rock that it started off as, it's more of a, you know, this is a song that speaks to my gut, not my beer-drinking head. 
 
A: Yeah, you know it's a great novelty, you know what I mean, for like a one-time thing. But it pigeon-holed us. It really pissed me off and it annoyed me. But now, no, it's full on...you know musically, I want to go in to a gun fight with a fucking razor blade and win. And with Chad [Grey, vocalist] it was time for him to be Chad. Who are you? There's a lot of fucked up shit in that head of yours. Let it out.
 
Q: Do you think he was saving some of that for Mudvayne?
 
A: I just think all the pieces of our puzzle finally came together. You know, I write music for him and for his life and he writes lyrics for me. I've been in a band with my favorite singer ever, we're best friends and what he does in his other band is what he does in his other band. With me, it's fucking Chad and Tom, Vinnie, Kyle [Sanders, bassist] and [guitarist Christian] Brady. It's transparent, it's real, it's organic and it's fuck all.

Originally published on radiocontraband.com

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12/12/2017 0 Comments

It's Time to Get Weird With Sunflower Dead

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by Carl C. Sundberg
March 2016


Take everything you know about the typical rock tale and throw it away. It's time to get weird.
 
We're talking accordions and face paint. We're talking zombie clowns. We're talking dark, bizarre fantasy worlds. We're talking car crashes with rich, wasted Vegas strippers. We're talking golden showers in hotel hallways. We're talking Jonathon Davis of Korn. We're talking about Sunflower Dead, a band you will not forget any time soon.
 
They rose from the ashes of the band Droid back in 2011, when ex-Droid guitarist Jamie Teissere joined up with old friends and fellow musicians Michael Del Pizzo and Jaboo to discuss a new band with a goal of “entertaining people”. As time went on, the lineup emerged, which including Buckethead bassist Luis Gascon, who was later replaced by Lats Kearns of Memento and drummer Jimmy Schultz, who, among other high-profile gigs, was a touring drummer for In This Moment at one point.
 
“The music industry is hard, and I can see how much it weighs on other bands we are around,” says Michael Del Pizzo, vocalist and accordion player for Sunflower Dead. “Everyone is scrambling to fit into a mold and hang on to any dollar they can bring in just to survive.  I feel people have lost focus on the point of rock… you know, to throw all the rules out the window and have some damn fun. I had been feeling for quite a bit before we started SFD that the world needed something like us.”
 
Sunflower Dead had to be beyond guys in T-shirts and jeans on stage, it had to larger than life. “I have 5 guys that have submitted to the idea of just being themselves 100% artistically,” says Del Pizzo.  “And yes, the makeup allows us to take it to places performance wise that I don’t think would be there if we wore the fad of the weeks clothes.”
 
To achieve their different approach and goals, they took a different approach to creating the band, spending their time crafting songs and stage personas rather that doing the old-fashioned “record demo - play local shows - rinse and repeat” technique that so many bands use in their early days.
 
The band had a goal to create a world where fans could escape into a dark, complex, twisted world, if only for a little while. “It’s no longer time for the world to have a villain to help them escape,” says Del Pizzo. “In the 90’s, Marilyn Manson was that villain and it was amazing. But today, we don’t need the villain, nor do we need a saint.  We do need the Anti Hero. In the SFD back story which is being turned into a graphic novel, our characters are these undead vigilantes that rise from the dead and destroy the evil.  We are the good guys in a sadistic kind of way.  That’s how we are on stage, we might kinda look creepy, but we are a hell of a lot of fun.”
 
Their approach has worked, as they started their career with a 2012 self-titled debut, produced by Christin Olde Wolbers of Fear Factory.
 
“Christian is a friend of ours and we were such a new band and at the time and he was trying to get into producing bands that we just said, f it, let’s do it,” says Del Pizzo. “Chris is hilarious and a great musician.  We had a lot of fun with him and his stories in his accent, haha.”
 
The album includes a darker, creepier and more sinister take of the Police's, “Every Breathe You Take”.  “I am really proud of that one and it goes over live great,” says Del Pizzo.  “After we wrote our debut album, I asked the guys if they wanted to do a cover.  Us being the kind of guys that are generally too preoccupied to learn the correct way to play a song, I sat down with Jaboo (my lead guitarist) and rearranged the song to make it fit SFD.  I believe we truly tapped into the stalker vibe of the song and brought a killer dynamic to it.  It’s not a love song when we play it!”
 
Their most recent album, the 2016 release, “It’s Time to Get Weird” is gaining traction on radio stations across the country as well as online, with the help of an old friend and special guest, Jonathon Davis of Korn, on the self-titled lead single, “It's Time to Get Weird”.
 
“The guys in Korn have been friends with my one guitarist Jamie Teissere since before they were Korn,” says Del Pizzo. “I mean real friends. Jamie even took guitar lessons from Munky back in the LAPD days.  It wasn’t our idea though to put him on the song.  Our album was completely finished, and the original version of the song just has me.  We were meeting with record labels in early 2015 and one of them suggested since we were going to tour with Korn in the summer if 2015 in the UK that we should ask JD to sing on a track.  Weird, we actually never thought of that.  We didn’t end up signing with the label, but we did take their great idea.  Jamie sent Jon a text, then just like that we were in Bakersfield, CA at Jon’s studio tracking his vocals.  It was awesome, and Jon is so rad.  What a nice person he is, and I was humbled to get to work with him.”
 
The band recently released the official video online, an animated tale that you've just got to see to appreciate. Check it out below.
 
In addition to the stage personas, the face paint and the dark anti-hero approach of the band's characters on stage, one of the more interesting aspects of Sunflower Dead is the use of the accordion, an instrument that may just be on the bottom of the list of expected instruments in a hard rock band.
 
“It’s under used for a good reason, it’s heavy and bulky and looks weird,” says Del Pizzo.  “But for me, it makes sense.  I started playing the accordion when I was about 20 out of boredom.  I already played the piano (sloppily) so I figured I would go out and buy an accordion and learn it.  It would be a good challenge.  The first time I strapped the thing on, it just felt 'right'.  I can’t explain it.  It was like I was supposed to play this ridiculous instrument.  I love the thing though.  I call it my 'Inhuman Lung' because it feels like an extension of my body.  When we put SFD together, Jamie actually requested that I use it in this band and he was right, it really is perfect for us.  It has been with SFD from the beginning.”
 
The accordion is certainly a great tool to set a band apart from the pack. It's inclusion into Sunflower Dead has certainly worked for the band live.
 
“Since every show starts with me walking out in my makeup and holding my accordion, you can imagine I have gotten every possible kind of reaction,” says Del Pizzo. “People yell “Weird Al” or “Urkel”, haha.  People have even straight busted out laughing.  But, as soon as I play it, everyone shuts up and the cell phones comes out to record it.  That’s the point of doing the show that way, especially for those that don’t what we are all about.  When you walk out looking like a zombie clown and you are playing an accordion, everyone’s and I mean EVERYONE’s expectations drop as low as they can go.  People think, this is going to be a catastrophe.  It’s another band in makeup and this idiot has an accordion.  Then we give it to them and the script flips.  It is a set up on our part and done purposely and always works the same.  Look at us getting all psychological on rock audiences haha.”
 
It even got the attention of nationally syndicated heavy metal TV and radio host Eddie Trunk, who was in the audience and caught the band's set at The Vinyl in Las Vegas for the RadioContraband Convention and Awards Ceremony. He dug it enough to tweet about the experience: “Checked out a new band called Sunflower Dead in Vegas the other night. Metal accordion! Was very cool.”
 
“The experience was incredible for me personally,” says Del Pizzo.  “Being a people watcher, I was happily surprised that it wasn’t a room full of industry suits.  I mean, you never know what something like this could turn out to be.  The Rock Radio Community, from what I saw, was this amazing group of people that are huge fans of the music they promote.  It was great to watch because these are the people that help build careers with their on-air support.  You could tell their excitement to be doing what they do and how stoked they were on the bands performing.  I absolutely loved that!
 
And speaking of Vegas, what rock band's tale would be complete without a wild night on the strip...
 
“Here is a fun little story that happened when some of my guys were coming back from the Killswitch Engage show at the Convention,” says Del Pizzo.  “They were driving down the strip and they got whacked by a car out of nowhere.  Apparently when they looked at the driver it was this banging hot stripper who was completely obliterated.  This chick was so out of sorts, she decided to drive off, fast.  The SFD guys, drove after her and were chasing her down the strip hanging out the window of their car taking photos and videos of her.  She eventually pulled over and she was really, really messed up, haha.  Perfect opportunity to make a deal, right?!?!  Instead of calling the cops, they told her to give them $3000 in cash for the damage and they would let it all go.  SHE DID, haha.  So, they got the cash and went to the next party of the evening, which I won’t repeat what happened.  But I do know that some hotel hallway in Vegas apparently received a golden shower.  Ok, that’s enough, the convention was AWESOME!”

Originally published on radiocontraband.com

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12/12/2017 0 Comments

The Struggle and Fury of Bobaflex

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by Carl C. Sundberg
March 2016



With six full length albums - seven total - and relentless tour schedules that keeps them on the road most of every year, Bobaflex believes in the power of blood, sweat and tears. Formed in 1998 by brothers and guitarist/vocalists Shaun and Marty McCoy, the band is celebrating their 15th anniversary. For many bands, this act alone is feat. But the McCoy brothers come from a legacy of family honor and strength as they are known for their ancestral ties to the most infamous family feud in American history between the Hatfield and McCoy families.
 
The notion of conflict, struggle and fury that fueled that feud remains strong generations later in the blood of the McCoy brothers and is clear in Bobaflex's music and album artwork. Take their latest album, “Anything That Moves” their seventh release for example. In addition to powerhouse songs from start to finish, it features an album cover of the sexiest post-apocalyptic world since Mad Max. Complete with a scantily-clad female warrior standing in the ruins of a devastated American capitol, holding a couple of wild weapons of mass destruction in each hand, you don't get more aggressive.

“Sex and violence is always the theme of every Bobaflex album,” says Marty McCoy. “She is the perfect image for the album. The title 'Anything that Moves' can be attached to whatever statement you like. Fuck, kill, love, hate, help, crush, anything that moves. That's the band in a nutshell.”
 
The latest single from “Anything That Moves” is a mammoth anthem called “Spider in the Dark” which follows in a long tradition of imaginative and haunting tunes from a band who fearlessly weaves their personal lives into their songs.
 
“It's about becoming a monster,” says McCoy. “Experiences shape our lives and not always for the better. Some of the things I've seen keep me up at night. I think a lot of people can connect with that.”
 
People are connecting to it. “Spider” is rising the rock radio charts and is being played on over 25 stations across the country and growing. It's connected even more online. In a world of trolls where it's more common to see disgust and hate in any given comments section, the YouTube video for “Spider” is flooded with fans from every walk of life, young and old, singing praise for the song, the band, and the legacy they continue to build with consistency and unique songwriting.
 
What helps Bobaflex stand apart from the rest of the pack most likely comes down to their lineup, which consists of not one, not two, but three vocalists who also play guitar. In addition to the McCoy brothers, Dave Tipple rounds out the trio of singers and axe slingers alongside Jymmy Toland holding down the low end on bass and Tommy Johnson in the back on drums. The three singer/guitarist approach has always been there, even before Bobaflex existed. It may come as surprise to many fans as to where it came from.
 
“It came about from our bluegrass roots,” says Marty McCoy. “We grew up with my father always jamming with bluegrass musicians in our living room. Everybody sang, and switched instruments and it was common place to hear harmonies and different lead singers. We always thought 'if you can't sing you can't be in the band'.”
 
In addition to that, Bobaflex also writes their music as a group, leaving no one out of the process. Unless of course, someone gets to rehearsal late.
 
“As far as writing goes, we all are involved,” says McCoy. “It's a beautiful thing. If you show up to rehearsal late you might be left out of the song. Everybody writes, and we like it that way. Keeps us from sounding the same on every song/album.”
 
This variety is one of the great aspects of Bobaflex, who has managed to write distinct, yet signature songs on every single album that never stray from heavy topics including: drug use and abuse, violence, broken relationships, nasty booking agents, insanity, death, wild sex, self-image issues, America's disintegrating society and the trials and tribulations of being a touring band among other things.
 
Each song is a novel in itself and the epic tales within them tend to come from an autobiographical, personal point of view. Take the brutally intense, “Home” from Bobaflex's 2007 album, “Tales from Dirt Town” which tells the story of a musician on the road who longs for the comfort of his home and does everything he can to endure and keep moving forward, including the ingesting of medication from a doctor. The dark, Pink Floyd-ish vibe is chilling to the core.
 
“It's absolutely an autobiography,” says McCoy. “We tour so much that sometimes you get really home sick. When you're 2,000 miles from home and your woman tells you she never wants to see you again you get great songs out of it.  Pink Floyd is one of my favorite bands. Any time we can rip them off I'm all for it.”
 
Speaking of ripoffs, it would appear that Disturbed took a page out of Bobaflex's book recetnly when they chose to cover Simon and Garfunkle's “The Sound of Silence”. Disturbed's rendition came out five years after Bobaflex recorded the same song on 2011's “Hell In My Heart.” We asked Bobaflex what they thought of this.
 
“I love Disturbed's version,” says McCoy. “They can do no wrong in my book. When we covered it, we wanted to do it as if Simon and Garfunkel were a new band in the music biz today. It's a beautiful song and it stands the test of time. All you have to do is sing it and it will remain beautiful. I'm glad to have been a part of it.”

Originally published on radiocontraband.com

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