KT Tunstall
There she was, in cactus-country, Arizona, far from the adoptive London scene that provided the backdrop to four albums, 4 million sales, one Ivor Novello and one Brit Award, and further still from the Scottish folk heartland that had nurtured her. She was working with Giant Sand frontman Howe Gelb; maverick, desert punk spirit, a storied musician and producer. In Tucson’s Wavelab Studios, the pair were recording a set of songs that had bloomed into life, almost without Tunstall knowing it, and that foreshadowed two momentous events that would make summer 2012 a turning point in the 37-year-old singer/songwriter’s life. “I’d always had this yearning to crack open my ribcage and be able to let everything out,” she reflects. She had attempted it through her personal journal writing, but had never had the confidence – the unselfconsciousness – to do it in song. “And then last year led to it all happening without even trying anymore,” says Tunstall. She’s referring to the death of her dad last August, then, the following month, her split from her musician husband. “But you know, the first half of the record was written before any of that happened, so there is a kind of weird savant quality to it.” The result: an album of two halves, both temporally and physically. Invisible Empire//Crescent Moon straddles either end of 2012, the year KT Tunstall’s world was rocked from its axis before settling on a new emotional orientation. Each was recorded in Arizona, and both are swaddled with atmosphere, poignancy and, yes, hurt – but, also, hope. One, oddly, prefigures the losses that were to come; the other, beautifully, captures a new, reinvigorated state of being in the aftermath. Together, they combine to create the album of Kate Victoria Tunstall’s life. At the beginning of last year, the Scottish singer, songwriter and musician had no immediate plans to make a new album. After touring the world in support of 2010’s Tiger Suit, she had intended to take things easy for a while. Circumstances, and frustrations, and desire, though, wouldn’t let her rest. “The last record was the beginning, I think, of a bit of a rebellion. I’d spent at that point six years on a pretty full tilt ride…whilst doing what I was doing within a very pop formula. So while I wasn’t always producing typical pop music, the way I was recording it, and the way those albums were getting to people, were in a pretty standard fashion in terms of being a pop artist signed to a major label. I needed things to change.” In the wake of the electronic-flavoured Tiger Suit, Tunstall decided to go “absolutely the other way”. In 2011 she recorded an EP, The Scarlet Tulip. Just her, at home, with a picked guitar. “So easy and so relaxed,” she beams. “It was great. And that fed into enjoying the idea of stripping back completely.” Around the same time her old Fife musician friend King Creosote (Kenny Anderson) asked if she’d be a vocal partner as he and Jon Hopkins toured their Mercury-nominated album Diamond Mine (2011). Popping up on the occasional stage in support of an album she felt was “astounding” was another palate-cleansing experience for a singer who had been on an album-tour-album treadmill for over half a decade. “Singing with Kenny again feels like a bit of a seminal moment for me,” she admits. Firstly she was honoured to help out on the Diamond Mine tour, having sung with Anderson on various projects for almost 20 years. And secondly, she loved travelling round the UK, experiencing these “totally silent and emotional” audiences. “Seeing people really desperate for something meaningful and something beautiful,” she elaborates. “And something executed passionately and with real craft. It was just such an antidote to a lot of stuff that’s out there at the moment.” Then came another collaboration: Jools Holland asked her to join his big band. It was her voice he was after, not just her personality. For the first time, Tunstall began to consider herself not just as a musician but specifically as a singer. “So this album is about singing,” she states, and readers would here be directed towards the graceful, gently orchestral triumph that is the song Crescent Moon as evidence of Tunstall’s sublime on-mic skills, “and it’s about my voice. That was what I wanted to be the centrepiece of the album, which I’d not done before.” Then, the third in a triptych of turning-point hook-ups. Robyn Hitchcock asked Tunstall to join a touring show called The Floating Palace. It was Hitchcock, Tunstall, Martin and Eliza Carthy, Krystle Warren and Howe Gelb. “Completely opposing musicians!” she smiles, “but we all played as each other’s band, and it was great.” She and Gelb, whom she’d never met before, hit it off, “mostly over a bottle of whiskey at the Glasgow gig, actually. And he’s just such good fun. He’s mischievous and he’s a maverick and he’s got a great bad attitude towards convention and is musically very exciting.” It was a union of distant but, as it transpired, confluent minds. “It was like aliens from different planets meeting each other for the first time.” Gelb invited Tunstall to record in his favourite studio in Tucson, Wavelab. Last February she travelled to Arizona for a two-week session. She laid down sketches for eight songs, based on “some pretty dumb guitar patterns and incredibly simple chord progressions”. How You Kill Me emerged that spring, a woozy, hypnotic blues. “Lifting me up to those branches, letting me look on the world…” sings Tunstall, leaning in close to the mic. “Just as I sing like a bird, you, you shoot me down for your fun…” “It’s about basically knowing your potential – knowing you’re great – but not being able to see it through because of your own insecurities and not feeling a support system around you.” Made Of Glass was another song from that period. As the title telegraphs, it’s a song about the fragility of life. “That was written way before my dad died,” she says of a composition about a friend who suddenly died from pancreatic cancer aged only 34. Just before he died he’d gifted her a cut-glass vase. The irony hit home afterwards. “I was like, you absolute bastard!” she laughs. “The one thing I’ve got that you’ve given me is the most breakable thing I own.” Months later, before the loss of her dad, she would write Carried, a drifting, chamber piece that seems to bottle the desert atmospherics. It’s about being transported over the threshold of life, inspired by her fathers’ physical struggle, but soon to be unusual in it’s clairvoyant nature. Feel It All, the album’s first single, is absolute torch-song and twang, and appears on the album in two versions; the original album version, with PJ Harvey collaborator John Parish on drumming duty and recorded at his Bristol studio and the ‘band jam’ version which was recorded live in Tucson. “It’s probably the most personal song for me on the album,” she says of a song that sits alongside Crescent Moon and rippling piano-ballad Yellow Flower as showcasing Tunstall’s best ever vocals, rich and intimate. “I started that just before dad died and I finished it just after my split. So it was absolutely birthed out of the intensity of those two things happening. It was real medicine for me, that song. She offers listeners a tonic, too, on the closing No Better Shoulder, a surging acoustic number that builds and builds to a belting, squealing, country-psych rocker that should catalyse a cathartic outburst of emotion when Tunstall starts touring her new, split-but-united album later this spring. “After the mood of the record I really wanted something that took you out at the end, and woke you up from this spell, if you like. Because I found that anything uptempo I was trying to fit into the tracklisting burst the bubble. And I wanted to stay within that. So No Better Shoulder is the way out at the end.” For sure, Invisible Empire//Crescent Moon is an album coloured by melancholy. But it’s not a grief album, she insists, and nor is it a break-up album. Not one of the songs on the second half directly references her divorce. Still, it is, as she says, an album in which she self-administers open-heart surgery. “Invisible Empire is probably the most relevant in terms of what was going to happen,” she says of the album opener, a song that wheezes into life before settling into an unsettling jaunty rhythm. “In that song I think there was a subconscious realisation that things weren’t as they should be – my subconscious was ahead of me, and I was catching up.” The song, she admits with a laugh, could be her in a nutshell: a cloud on the horizon but a skip in her step. “A big thing about the album for me,” concludes KT Tunstall, who – prior to a summer run of festival band shows – will be touring solo, unaccompanied, “is that I don’t care if it’s sad. I want it to be an emotional experience. But I don’t actually think it is a sad album. Melancholic is probably quite a good description of it. But it really is me now coming from a place where I don’t feel the need to please anybody but myself. I always liked to think that’s where I was before – but I don’t think I was.” kttunstall.com
Hans van Even
Hans Van Even was born in Turnhout (Belgium) on 4 June 1969. At age 12 he began playing the guitar after listening to performances by Alvin Lee, Jimi Hendrix, Jimi Page, … He studied classical music at “RIKSO” Belgium (high school of Art & Classical Music www.kunsthumanioraklassiek.be). Later he studied jazz & modern music at “Jazz Studio” in Belgium www.jazzstudio.be. At this period, his group Coco Spirit played opening gigs for artists like Joe Cocker, Christopher Cross and John Miles at the Night of the Proms and recorded as session guitarist for some Belgian artists. In January 1993 he moved to France to join the fusion-jazz group Stolen. With Stolen he played opening acts for Mike Stern and André Ceccarelli. From 1993-2000, Hans has taught guitar and improvisation at CIAM ( college of contemporary music in Bordeaux, France) and continues to teach in his own school www.guitarattitude.com Since 2000 he played with numerous artists and did demonstrations for brands like Washburn, Roland, Randall, Blackstar Amplification, … and played in Japan, Musikmesse Germany, France, Spain, Holland, Belgium. In 2014 Hans released his first solo CD “Stardust Requiem”, a 77 minutes voyage travelling many styles, with two of his favorite guitarists, Tony MacAlpine and Brett Garsed, on guest solos. Hans also co-designed the whole Parallaxe guitar series for Washburn including guitars for Trevor Rabin, Ola Englund and Marzi Montazeri. www.hansvaneven.net
Butch Walker
Butch Walker Biography by Tim Sendra After gaining a brief taste of major-label success during the ’80s and ’90s — particularly with Marvelous 3, whose single “Freak of the Weak” became a modern rock hit in 1999 — singer/guitarist Butch Walker traded his bandmates for a solo career. Meanwhile, he also established himself as an in-demand producer by working with marketable artists like Avril Lavigne, Katy Perry, and P!nk. Raised in Cartersville, Georgia, Bradley Glenn Walker III launched his public career with the band SouthGang, who traveled to Los Angeles in 1988 and inked a contract with Virgin Records. The pop-metal group released two albums before splitting up, and Walker eventually resurfaced with Marvelous 3. The band enjoyed moderate popularity as the ’90s wound to a close, but Walker grew frustrated with the band’s label, Elektra Records, and Marvelous 3 splintered soon after. He then spent a year producing albums for such groups as Injected and SR-71 (whose most popular single, “Right Now,” was co-written by Walker). The production work increased his reputation within the industry, and he quickly signed a solo contract with Arista. Left of Self Centered marked his solo debut in 2002; it also took a page from Marvelous 3’s book by embodying the singer’s non-conformist attitude and playful rock & roll swagger. Unfortunately, neither that album nor its follow-up, 2004’s Letters, caught on with the public. Walker increasingly turned to production work, and he spent the following two years helming records for such big-name artists as Avril Lavigne (Under My Skin), P!nk (I’m Not Dead), and Tommy Lee (Tommyland: The Ride), as well as emerging pop stars like Lindsay Lohan (A Little More Personal [Raw]). The experience further boosted his industry profile and helped shape the sound of his next solo album, 2006’s The Rise and Fall of Butch Walker and the Let’s-Go-Out-Tonites. The album spun stories of drugged-out starlets, struggling wannabes, late-night adventures, and wild parties in L.A.; it was also Walker’s most fully realized record to date. Ever the multi-tasker, he returned to the production booth for several new projects — most notably Katy Perry’s One of the Boys, which became a smash success during the summer of 2008 — before returning to his solo career that fall with Sycamore Meadows. I Liked It Better When You Had No Heart followed in 2010 and featured a new backup band, the Black Widows, which included fellow Georgia natives Fran Capitanelli and Chris Unck. The new group also played on Walker’s next album, Spade, which appeared 2011; that same year, he published an autobiography called Drinking with Strangers: Music Lessons from a Teenage Bullet Belt. Walker did some production work in the next two years — he showed up on Taylor Swift’s 2012 album Red and helmed Fall Out Boy’s 2013 comeback Save Rock and Roll — and teamed with producer Ryan Adams for his next solo album, 2015’s Afraid of Ghosts. butchwalker.com
Jindi Wu
Guitarist: Jindi Wu (Da Di) Tel: 15810012813 E-mail: [email protected] From: The city Hulun Buir of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region Profession: Guitarist, Singer From 2011 till now, Signed with American Ernie Ball and acted as spokesperson for China marketing. From 2013 till now, Became the spokesperson of American Motorhead headphones for China marketing From 2014 to 2016. Signed with American guitar brand “DEAN”  and acted as spokesperson in Global. From 2017 till now,Signed with American guitar brand “WASHBURN”  spokesperson for China marketing. From 2017 till now,Signed with guitar speaker brand “DV MARK”  spokesperson for China marketing. “The guitarist of Crack band, The guitarist of Face band, The guitarist of Sun-nan band”  “The guitarist of Song Dongye band” To participate in the recording of large music tv show: Jiangsu TV <Star Wars”>, Almighty Hunan satellite TV < I am a singer >, Oriental TV < China Star >,etc. cooperation entertainer:  Song Dongye, Ma Di, Yao Shisan, Sun Nan, Li Yuchun, Shunzi, Huang Qishan, Liu Ruoying, Yang Zongwei,Wu Xinhan, Su Jianxin (xin) and so on. 2002    I am Graduated from hailar modern pop music school of Hulun Buir of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. Work experience: 2000 I have started to organize the rock band. Position: Guitarist 2003 I have started forming a band, recording and performance as a professional guitarist and singer From 2009 till now. I have joined the Chinese heavy metal style “crack band” Act as: Guitarist 2012 Li Yuchun band Act as: guitarist From 2013 till now. Sun Nan band Act as: guitarist From 2014 till now Song Dongye band Act as: guitarist 2014 Ma Di concert band Act as: guitarist 2015 Joined the face band Act as: guitarist The performance experience: 2009 13 club “We are brother for the both sides of the Taiwan” series of metal carnival night performance. 2009 330 Metal music festival 2009 “The aviator·Olympic sports center” summer pilot music festival 2009 13Club “The revelation of life” series of metal performance (The second). 2009 Commemorated “Pantera band” theme metal music performances 2010 13 Club Dame record metal series performances (The first) 2010 The first “Tap on a metal” theme music festival 2010 To be the honored guest of Beijing “suffocation band” concert 2010 Rebirth music festival (TianJin) 2010 330 metal music festival 2010 The “Crack band” first EP《You are always in the war》 2011 “Metal Day guitar China” Metal music festival 2011 I have joined 13 Club “dame record” metal series performances (The third) 2011 Join MAO live house CHNC 2011 To participate in the China Open of “WACKEN OPEN AIR” 2011 I have signed with American Ernie Ball and acted as spokesperson for China marketing. 2011 51 metal music festival 2011 330 metal music festival 2012 Strawberry Music Festival 2012 To be the guest of suffocation band the 15th anniversary of the China tour. (Wuhan station, Changsha station, Nanchange station, Beijing station) 2012 Tuborg beer music festival (Yinchuang station, Wuhai station, Zhongwei station) 2012 330 metal music festival (Lanzhou station) 2012 MAO live house, the rock and roll music scene of Christmas Eve 2012 I have been the guest of Poland “Vader band” 2012 tour (China station) 2012 I have Participate in the “fire time” MV recording of  Li Yuchun of the chinese singer 2013 Strawberry Music Festival 2013 330 metal music festival 2013 I have been the guest of Germany “Destruction band” 2013 tour (China station) 2013 I have been the guest of Germany “Kreator band” 2013 tour (China station) 2013 I have Became the spokesperson of American Motorhead headphones for China marketing 2013 Strawberry Music Festival 2013 (Sunnan band)I have participated in the performances of “The 11th Huading Award Global music satisfaction survey released festival ” 2013 (Sunnan band) I have participated in the performances of “The 7th china mobile wireless music festival” 2013 (Sunnan band) I have participated in the performances of “2013 Asian idol award” 2013 MAO live house “Guoan football” Music Festival 2013 I have Participated in the recording of <<Universal Star Wars>> in jiangsu TV, and Acted as guitarist of Sunnan band. 2013 I have Participated in the performances of “Baidu boiling” and acted as guitarist of Sunnan band. 2014 I have participated in the “Hunan Satellite TV· across the year’s eve ” and  acted as guitarist of Huang Qishan band. 2014 MAO live house “believe in music” theme performances 2014 In the WOA competition—the China best string music performance award and Won the first in the mainland 2014 The Changejiang river international music festival 2014 MAO live house “Green giants music festival” 2014 I have been as the guest of “The band tryouts of the national campus” (Zhenjiang, Xijin Ferry) 2014 Baidu “summer party” and i acted as guitarist of Sunnan band. 2014 330 metal music festival (Shenyang station) 2014 Linyi oak music festival 2014 The national tour of <<Chu er lao que>>, Tianjing station, Xian station, Chongqiong station, Wuhan station, Nanjing station, Taiwan station. 2014 The <<Shutter Island>> concert of Ma Di in Shenyang station. 2014 Crack band had the across the year’s eve in Hunan Shaoyang. 2014 Formally signed with American guitar brand “DEAN”  and act as spokesperson in Global. 2015 The concert of Sond Dongye in Hangzhou station 2015 I have participated in program<<I am signer>> with the highest ratings that act as one guest musicians and show with Sunnan. 2015 I have participated in 《Honda DreamWing Beijing》new car conference as a folk singer 2015 The MV <<soul contracts>> of Crack band has came online on all the video website and also have received the extremely high appraisal from the people of industry. 2015 330 metal music festival 2015 I have participated in Happy valley music festival act as the guitarist of Sunnan band 2015 I have participated in the ceremony held for the first release of mainland singer “Wu Xinhan” act as the guitarist of band. 2015 I have participated in the 2015 TaiYuan Daijian star music festival act as the guitarist of “Song Dongye band”. 2015 I have participated in the 2015 Beach music festival in Zhouhai act as the guitarist of “Song Dongye band”. 2015 I have participated in the 2015 Song Dongye concert with theme Wukesong Huiyuan space act as the guitarist of “Song Dongye band”. 2015 I have participated in guest band players of the band audition in Wuhan act as the guitarist of “Ma Di band”. 2015 I have participated in the 2015 Strawberry Music Festival in Xiamen act as the guitarist of “Song Dongye band”. 2015 I have participated in the 2015 tour of Guangzhou, Shanghai, Chongqing, Shenyang stations act as the guitarist of “Song Dongye band”. 2015 I have participated in the 2015 Ideal Music Festival in Shenzhen act as the guitarist of “The Face band” that is a Chinese old metal band. 2015 I have participated in the Shanghai and Beijing station of the Sunnan 2015 <<Happiness within>> tour act as the guitarist of “Sunnan band”. 2016 I have participated in the <<Sesame oil leaves>> across year concert in workers’ Stadium act as the guitarist of “Song Dongye band”. 2016 I have participated in the recording of last three phases of Shanghai’s Dragon Television program <<Star of China>> act as the guitarist of “Sunnan band”. 2016 I have participated in the program recording of the time legend of tramping-meet “Yang Zongwei” in 2016.01.23 at DragonBall scene act as the guitarist of “Yang Zongwei band”. 2016 I have followed Sun Nan to the United States to joined in the personal concert of Sun Nan <<Happiness within>> that opened in the Connecticut State of United States. 2016 I have participated in the 2016 Lebao music Festival in Xishuangbanna act as the guitarist of “Song Dongye band”. 2016 I have participated in the Wuhan and Shanghai station of Strawberry Music Festival act as the guitarist of “Song Dongye band”. 2016 I have participated in the Dalian station of concert <<A Young Dream>> act as the guitarist of “Song Dongye band”. 2016 I have participated in the 2016 Taihu MIDI music festival act as the guitarist of “The Face band”. 2016 Then i acted as the the guitarist of “Song Dongye band” and have participated in the other types of Music Festival that opened in Ningbo, Beijing bird’s nest, Changzhou, Shanghai, Xiamen, Suzhou, Shijiazhuang, Yinchuan, Kunming and other cities. 2016 I have participated in the first ceremony of movie “city with high walls” and individual singles << steel heart>><< city with high walls >> act as the guitarist of “(Xin)Su Jianxin” 2016  I have participated in the Inner Mongolia cavalry music festival in Hohhot City act as the guitarist of “The face band” 2016 I have participated in the 2016 Shanxi Datong recovery music Festival act as the guitarist of “The face band”. 2016 I have participated in the graze sheep music Festival in Beijing bird’s nest act as the guitarist of “Song Dongye band”. 2016 I have participated in the Liupanshui music Festival in GuiZhou act as the guitarist of “Sunnan band”. 2016 I have participated in the Dujiangyan Western Music Festival in Sichuan act as the guitarist of “The Face band”. 2016 I have participated in the Dujiangyan Western Music Festival in Sichuan act as the guitarist of “Sunnan band”. Receive the interview: Heavy music, MOGO, Baidu music, The list of Chinese rock and roll
Z-boy
He actually wanted to be Pro-Skater, unfortunately the Zombie Apocalypse put a spoke in his wheel. Infected and incapable of keeping a foot on the board that meant the world, alternatives seemed vastly redeemed. In fact… only music was left to pursue. A choice was made quickly. The Axe was the desired instrument! Z BOY randomly infected a couple of other fellows in misery and henceforth they decided to capture Zombie World Domination under the banner of WILD ZOMBIE BLAST GUIDE! This turned out to be working quite well as already the second album “Salute the Commander” is available worldwide and the Zombie Horde keeps constantly growing…… it seems the Zombie Apocalypse is INEVITABLE!   www.wzbg.net
Akos
Akos Olt, lead guitarist of Kill With Hate, was born on the 9th of March 1987 in Budapest, Hungary. Early on he was a fan of guitar music and fascinated by the art of the instrument. He was a fan of classic rock bands like Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin as kid, but in his early teens his life was completely changed by the genre: metal. That inspired him to pick up the guitar. Started out on calssical guitar in 2000 but the real passion was with his first electric guitar in 2003.After the first attempts with being in a band, he joined the thrash metal act Archaic in 2006. They’ve gigged a lot, even toured with Testament, but Akos was more into death metal than thrash, so he quit to focus on his current band, Kill With Hate.He recorded an EP and an album with Kill With Hate, Evolution of the Beast in 2009 and Voices of Obliteration in 2012, did 3 european tours, and opened the stage for bands such as Cannibal Corpse, Origin, and The Black Dahlia Murder. His main influences are Jon Levasseur from Cryptopsy, Paul Ryan from Origin, Muhammed Suigmez from Necrophagist, Chuck Shculdiner from Death and James Murphy to name a few. His chosen axe: Washburn PXS297FRB www.killwithhate.com/
Arkadius
Inspired by guitarists like Angus Young, Krik Hammet and Jimi Hendrix, Arkadius started to play guitar in 1994. It was the same year, he founded his band SuidAkrA and became it’s mastermind. Arkadius began to play other string instruments like acoustic guitar, Banjo and mandolin and he developed his own guitarsound, which is a mixture of melodic death metal, enriched by celtic folky elements. He wrote, produced and released 13 Albums, 2 Demos and a Live DVD. From his very first show with SuidAkrA to the present day, Arkadius made an excited journey over three continents and he currently played numerous Festivals and tours in Europe, Turkey, China, Brazil, India and USA. Beside his own band Arkadius also works on several projects as live guitarist, and guest musician. He spent for example a week on the behalf of the German Goethe institute to support Indian regional musical projects which was accompanied by a large public and media interest. He’ll return to India to play as first international musician ever an Indien headlining tour in april 2014. Arkadius plays the following Wasburn models: Washburn PXS20EC Washburn PXM20EFTBM www.suidakra.com
Christian Balanean
DIRTY SHIRT is a Metal-Industrial-Hardcore band from Romania. The band’s unique style derives from mixing the heavy sound of rock/metal with the festive ambiance of East-European traditional music, the eclecticism of world music (country, reggae, tribal rhythms), the electro sound of industrial music, the energy of hardcore, and the groove of funk. THE EARLY YEARS (1995-2000) In 1995, four young musicians from the small town of Seini (MaramureÅŸ County) in Romania laid the foundations of a new musical project they called DIRTY SHIRT. At the time, their music was a combination of diverse elements, such as progressive, alternative, power metal, hardcore, etc. They band quickly earned itself a good reputation in the Romanian underground, especially due to its pretty busy live schedule. It included several tours and the participation at well-known competitive festivals (Samfest, Samus Rock, Posada, Young Rock for Youngs, Metalfan, ConstelaÅ£ii Rock, and so forth) where they won several prizes. Additionally, their first demos received positive reviews in the specialized media. In 1998, DIRTY SHIRT won the Great Prize at the Top T Festival in Buzău, which gave them the opportunity to record their first full-length “Very Dirty” (Promusic Prod, 2000). Unfortunately, shortly after the release of the record, at a time when things really started to take off, the band was compelled to go on a several year-long hiatus due to personal reasons. THE NEW DIRTY SHIRT (2004-) Although band members were “scattered” in different corners of Europe, DIRTY SHIRT reunited in 2004. They also made several adjustments to their music. The demos released in this period brought to the fore several new musical elements, such as industrial metal and hardcore spiced up with folk, funk, and electronic influences. In the following years, the band had a busy live schedule, having many shows in Romania, Hungary, France and Belgium. They embarked on several national tours with important bands such as Tripod (FR), Babylon Pression (FR), Zeroscape (CAN) and Superbutt (HU). Additionally, they were also invited to play at major rock festivals in Romania (Maximum Rock, Samfest, Rock la MureÅŸ, Top T and East West Fest) where they shared the stage with many great bands such as Overkill, UDO, Crematory, Lake of Tears, etc. In 2009, the band recorded its second full-length “Same Shirt, Different Day” at the Kallaghan Studio in France. It was mastered by Alan Douches (West West Side Music, USA). The album was released in 2010 and received many positive reviews both in Romania and abroad. The period 2010-2011 was arguably one of the most prolific in the band’s history. Apart from the promotional tour (which included more than fifty shows in Romania, Hungary and Germany) and the participation at various rock festivals (Route 68, Student Fest, Rockin’ Transylvania, Fraureuth Open Air, and Dirty Fest), DIRTY SHIRT also made three videos (“Pitbull,” “Manifest” and “East West”) and released its first ever live DVD entitled “Live in the Truck.” Additionally, the band qualified for the national finals of the most important international music competitions: Wacken Metal Battle, Peninsula Talent Stage, and Global Battle of the Bands (it took the second place in 2011). In 2012, the band won several prizes at Bite My Music Global Awards, including the first prize for the song “East West” in the category “Best collaboration”. In the summer of 2012, DIRTY SHIRT recorded their third album “Freak Show” at several studios in Romania and France. It was mixed and mastered by Charles “Kallaghan” Massabo at 118 West Studio in Los Angeles. Since its release in February 2013, the album has received unanimous praise in both Romanian and international media outlets. The first single “Freak Show” was included in the social game RockStar Rising (Facebook, iPad), and two additional songs will be soon included in the music game RockBand as well. Furthermore, the song was the subject of an international remix contest with Propellerhead and Kallaghan Records as sponsors/partners. Four music videos have been released in 2013, all of them being available online on various media platforms (“Săracă Inima Me / Poor Little Heart of Mine”, “Freak Show”, “Bad Apples” and “Ride”). Last but not least, the band completed two Romanian tours and one European tour in support of the new album, which included over forty shows. In 2014, as winner of the Wacken Metal Battle competition in Romania, Dirty Shirt participated in the international competition at Wacken Open Air in Germany, where they took 2nd place, which is a notable achievement not only for the band itself, but also for the Romanian metal scene in general. In the meantime, the band have been hard at work on their next studio album “Dirtylicious”, a very ambitious project that will include a four-piece folk band. In addition, the tour in support of their latest album “Freak Show” continues with dozens of shows in Romania and other European countries. Another notable step forward was the signing of a management and booking (for Romania) deal with Promusic Events. DISCOGRAPHY: STUDIO ALBUMS: “Very Dirty” (Promusic Prod, 2000) “Same Shirt Different Day” (self-released, 2010) “Freak Show” (self-released, 2013) DVD: “Live in the Truck” (Est-Ouest, 2011) VIDEOS ( www.youtube.com/dirtyshirtoriginal ): “Săracă inima me / Poor little heart of mine” (2013) “Bad Apples” (2013) “Freak Show” (2013) “Freak Show” (2012): lyric video “Manifest” (2010): with two versions; note: the long version has “New Millennium” as intro “East West” (2010): featuring Candice (Eths), K-Lee & Daniel (Tripod), Mat (Babylon Pression) and Kallaghan (Sikh, RAS) “Pitbull” (2009): cover of Kusturica & No Smoking Orchestra (soundtrack of “White Cat, Black Cat”) “Gone” (2008): demo version “UB” (2005): demo version, inspired by the Romanian folk song „Cine iubeÅŸte ÅŸi lasă”.   www.facebook.com/DirtyShirtRomania www.youtube.com/dirtyshirtoriginal www.dirtyshirt.bandcamp.com www.dirty-shirt.com
Daniel Baum
Daniel Baum Rhythm Guitarist Darkest Horizon, Musical expertise / Other instruments : Ø Guitar – 14 years Ø 2 years vocal training I started very early with some different Instruments. At the age of 7 years I found my way from the Violin through the Cello to the Acoustic Guitar. At the Age of 11 years I start playing Electric Guitar. Equipment PXM20FRFBCBM PXM27EC X40 Pro www.darkesthorizon.com
John Bell
27 years ago this week, a singer everyone called J.B., a bass-playing future journalism school dropout and a guitarist nicknamed Panic for his bouts with anxiety went looking for a drummer for their next gig. After striking out with the usual suspects around Athens, Georgia, the three friends made an eleventh-hour call to a high-school band mate of the guitar player living in Atlanta, thinking he might still have his kit handy. A few days later, Todd Nance rolled up to the house at 320 King Avenue shared by John Bell, Michael Houser and David Schools in an old, beat-up white Maverick, his drums crammed into the back. After a night of rehearsing, the new quartet hopped onstage together for the first time the next day at the old Mad Hatter Ballroom to play a short set that opened with the Buffalo Springfield classic “For What It’s Worth.” Widespread Panic was born. Within the year, Domingo “Sunny” Ortiz, a drummer new in town from Austin, Texas, began turning up at their regular Monday night gigs at the Uptown Lounge and never left. As weekly gigs morphed into regional tours, the band began to forge a sound unto themselves, a combination of Houser’s unorthodox guitar playing, Bell’s coarse growl, Nance’s rock-steady drumming, Schools’ lead bass playing, Ortiz’s multi-textured percussion coupled with a collective commitment to playing original songs from the outset and a willingness to walk the improvisational high wire night after night. Landslide Records came calling and Space Wrangler, Widespread Panic’s debut album, dropped in September 1988, the first copies of which were hand-delivered to the band by Col. Bruce Hampton, an area shaman, bandleader and early mentor. Former Dixie Dreg T Lavitz manned the keyboards for the band’s self-titled follow-up released on Capricorn Records in July 1991, but it really wasn’t until John “Jojo” Hermann – a native New Yorker-turned-Mississippian equally snapped by the likes of Professor Longhair and Terry Adams – claimed the chair the following spring that the band felt like a true ensemble. With a new songwriter, vocalist and worthy onstage foil in Hermann in the fold, the band’s lineup was set. Over the next two decades, Widespread Panic released nine more studio albums and sold more than three million records, building a loyal following on the road beginning in dingy dive bars across the South and eventually headlining nearly every major U.S. music festival and selling out some of the world’s most prestigious venues. No artist has more sold-out concerts at Colorado’s Red Rocks Amphitheater, and their headlining appearance at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival set the single-day attendance record. The celebration for their first live album, Light Fuse, Get Away, drew more than 100,000 fans for a free show in downtown Athens and is still considered one of the largest CD-release parties in music history. By 2002, the band was one of America’s best and most sought-after rock acts, but rock ‘n roll fairytales inevitably take a tragic turn. Michael Houser, Panic’s founding guitarist and inscrutable core, developed pancreatic cancer. The guitarist remained rooted at stage right until a few weeks before his death, delivering a spine-tingling, tear-jerking performance for the band’s headlining spot at the inaugural Bonnaroo Arts & Music Festival. Eight weeks after leaving the road, Houser was gone, taking with him a unique musical signature that fans affectionately dubbed The Lingering Lead. An era was over. At the behest of their late guitarist, the remaining band members returned to the road, enlisting several friends to share the stage and help heal the void left by the irreplaceable Houser. It wasn’t until the summer of 2006 – when John Bell placed a call to an old friend to see if he might be interested in joining the band – that the wheels were put in motion for a new chapter in Widespread Panic’s history to begin. *** Jimmy Herring was no stranger to Widespread Panic when he got the call inviting him to join the band. A veteran of the Atlanta music scene, Jimmy first crossed paths with the band in the late ‘80s as the lead guitarist for Colonel Bruce Hampton and the Aquarium Rescue Unit. From the first flurry of notes at his very first show with the band – the opening night of a four-show run at Radio City Music Hall that kicked off the band’s 2006 fall tour – Herring has re-energized Widespread Panic in the best way possible: by restoring a signature guitar sound to their music, returning a sense of balance to their ensemble and enabling the band to continue to incite, amaze and move people closer to joy. Nothing gold can stay, and no band understands that lesson better than Widespread Panic, but with Herring now in his seventh year in the fold and the band fresh off an ten-month hiatus and ready to roll, there’s a palpable sense of renewed purpose and commitment and a rejuvenated enthusiasm within the band. That vibe – the feeling that anything can and may happen – is back with Widespread Panic. And it feels good. www.widespreadpanic.com
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