The Sex Pistols


The Sex Pistols were an English punk rock band that formed in London in 1975. They were responsible for initiating the punk movement in the United Kingdom and inspiring many later punk and alternative rock musicians. Although their initial career lasted just two-and-a-half years and produced only four singles and one studio album, Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols, they are regarded as one of the most influential acts in the history of popular music.



The Sex Pistols originally comprised vocalist Johnny Rotten, guitarist Steve Jones, drummer Paul Cook and bassist Glen Matlock. Matlock was replaced by Sid Vicious in early 1977. Under the management of impresario Malcolm McLaren, the band provoked controversies that took Britain by storm. Their concerts repeatedly faced difficulties with organizers and authorities, and public appearances often ended in mayhem. Their 1977 single "God Save the Queen", attacking Britons' social conformity and deference to the Crown, precipitated the "last and greatest outbreak of pop-based moral pandemonium".
In January 1978, at the end of a turbulent tour of the United States, Rotten left the band and announced its break-up. Over the next several months, the three other band members recorded songs for McLaren's film version of the Sex Pistols' story, The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle. Vicious died of a heroin overdose in February 1979. In 1996, Rotten, Jones, Cook and Matlock reunited for the Filthy Lucre Tour; since 2002, they have staged further reunion shows and tours.


Red Hot Chili Peppers

The Red Hot Chili Peppers are an American rock band formed in Los Angeles in 1983. The group's musical style primarily consists of rock with an emphasis on funk, as well as elements from other genres such as punk rock and psychedelic rock. Live, they incorporate many aspects of jam rock due to the improvised nature of much of their performances. Currently, the band consists of founding members Anthony Kiedis (vocals) and Michael "Flea" Balzary (bass), longtime drummer Chad Smith, and guitarist Josh Klinghoffer, who joined in late 2009, following the departure of John Frusciante.



Besides Kiedis and Flea, the original lineup's completed drummer Jack Irons and guitarist Hillel Slovak. In the recordings of the first records were several lineup changes, and The Uplift Mofo only Party Plan (1987) agreed the four founding members in the study. In 1988, guitarist Hillel Slovak died of a heroin overdose, resulting in the departure of Irons. After the arrival in 1989 of Chad Smith and John Frusciante as substitutes Irons and Slovak, this training would record the album Mother's Milk (1989), Blood Sugar Sex Magik (1991), Californication (1999), By The Way (2002), Stadium Arcadium (2006).
While the Red Hot Chili Peppers were on tour in Japan in 1992, Frusciante left the band, and would not return until 1998. Dave Navarro became his substitute during that period, and he released the album One Hot Minute (1995). Blood Sugar Sex Magik was the leap to the international success of the group, with a clear reference to the stylistic fusion that characterized the '90s.


A history of a rock star

"I was at lunch the other day with some coworkers at a place called 'Nearly Normal's' in Corvallis, OR (which is where the Oregon State University is located). I was wearing my shirt from the 2010 tour of AIC, and a man and his wife stopped by our table and they started looking at me. The man politely asked me: "Sorry, we realized your shirt. Do you like that band, or is just a shirt? "
I said, "Alice in Chains is my favorite band and has been for a long time."
He said: "Good, I have a little story for you if you do not mind."

So this guy tells me that about 10 years ago or a little more, he and his son being in downtown Corvallis, near the ocean, his son was riding his bike spinning even with training wheels. There was a guitarist sitting on a bench in the park playing an acoustic guitar. The boy stopped riding his bike to listen. Then he got off his bike and walked over and sat right in front of the guitarrist.

The guitarist told the boy: it not better ride your bike? You don't want to sit here and listen to me, right? "
The boy said: "No, I want to hear you play"
The guitarist says, "OK. What do you want to hear?"
"What you were playing"
The father (again, the guy who told me this story) was listening and said: 
"Wow, you're good!"
The guitarist said: "Thanks. Is Something I did"
The father says, "You mean professionally? Like you're in a band?"
"Yes"
"Oh, then you play in Peacock (A small bar in Corvallis) and places like that?"
"No. It would be fun, but we would have security problems there"

The father was thinking ... well, get kicked out of the bar or something. So he asked:
 "What do you mean by security problems?"
The guitarist says, "Oh, well, we have exhausted the Superdome and stuff like that."
"Oh, so you're great at what you do then huh?"
"Yes, I guess I could say that."
"What is the name of the band you are?
"Alice in Chains".

The father had no idea what it is Alice in Chains, then he would have a conversation with Jerry Cantrell as to who are Alice in Chains, how is your music and things like that. Jerry told him about what he was pressured by the record company and about Layne, who had re-entered rehabilitation. Jerry started playing again for the child and the father began to think
"Wow, what is making a big rock star sitting on a bench in a park in Corvallis," then he asked:
"Wait a minute, you're a pretty big rock star, what are you doing here in Corvallis sitting on a bench playing your guitar?"
Jerry replied, "Oh, I'm just waiting for my brother appears. He is a professor at OSU (Oregon State University)"

The father told me he was very impressed with how easy and pleasant to be Jerry. I was really surprised that a rock star, you were sitting there and playing his guitar for any child and have a talk with your father. "


Layne's Interview


Layne Staley Unchained Pandemonium Interview

Maxi: Has Alice in Chains broken up?
Layne: No. Alice in Chains has taken a break from the strict, stressful, busy routine. We're going to relax a little more. We've renegotiated our record contract to take the pressure off of having to deliver so many finished albums. We're giving them one new album, and then we'll see what happens.

M: What about the Metallica tour? Why did you pull out?
L: We decided that we needed some time to grow individually. We were all tired. 

M: The rumor mill is rich with tales of a huge fight between you and Jerry Cantrell. Is any of this true?

L: No, we get along fine. We have no differences about music or direction. We started this band as kids, and as time has gone on, we've grown and we are learning to accommodate each others differences as friends and bandmates. 

M: What do you think about the treatment that you've been getting by the press lately?

L: I haven't read anything but regurgitated rumors. They [the press] are borrowing insults from the previous article. Nothing new, and nothing true. 

M: What have you been doing since releasing Jar of Flies?

L: I have, so far, written songs for half of a record that I plan to do myself at the end of the summer, and I recorded the full Mad Season record. I also had a feature show at an art gallery with my pen and ink drawings. 

M: One of those drawings is on the cover of your new album.

L: Right. On the Mad Season album. 

M: Give me a brief history of the early days of your career with Alice in Chains.

L: We played the Seattle scene for two and a half to three years, then went in to record what we intended to be our own independent record. We thought we could find someone to distribute it for us locally. What ended up happening, was that Susan Silver and Kelly Curtis came down to the studio to hear us recording. Our manager at the time couldn't stay with us, and Susan and Kelly said they wanted to help us out. They said that if they didn't get us what we wanted in six months we wouldn't have to pay them anything, because they felt certain they could get us a record deal in six months. They made good on their promise, and we made good on our promise to let them manage us. Next we did a couple of tours. Our first tour was with Extreme from Boston. We saw how ridiculous Rock 'n Roll is on the touring side of the business. It's no different than the movie Spinal Tap. 



M: What station was it that first started giving you radio attention?

L: KISW. Damon Stewart was the first DJ to start spinning our songs. 

M: How did audiences react to Alice in Chains at first hearing?

L: They just looked at us at first. But the more we circled around and came back to each city, the better the response got. By our third or fourth U.S. tour we felt like we were doing okay on stage. 

M: You did four US tours...

L: We did Extreme, Iggy Pop, Van Halen, Clash of the Titans - that's the one that really pushed us over the top. We survived a Slayer crowd every night for about fifty days and thought we could do about anything after that. Slayer's was not an easy crowd to please. 

M: I imagine you must have started to get sick of some of that material. How many times do you think you've played "Man in the Box?"

L: Hundreds. I think we played it at almost every show. 

M: A lot of people finger your songs on the Singles soundtrack as kind of a turning point for you guys. How did that movie affect your career?

L: It helped a lot to get our music out to so many people who were all focusing on the Seattle scene thing at the time. 

M: How is success treating you? What does it feel like to have enough money to fly anywhere in the world right now?

L: [Laughter] I'm not set for life, but I guess I can go anywhere I want. If only I knew where to go.
 
M: What did you go out and buy after you got your first advance?

L: I paid a lot to the IRS. No fancy cars, but I bought some good recording equipment, guitars, furniture, and I bought a computer. I haven't bought much since. 

M: If you were writing your autobiography, what would you put in it? What would you want people to know about you?

L: I've always looked for the perfect life to step into. I've done all the work, taken all the paths to get where I wanted. But no matter how far I go, I still come home to me. At home I'm just Layne, a guy who has interests that extend far beyond music. Music is the career I'm lucky enough to get paid for, but I have other desires and passions. Music is the doorway that has led me to drawing, photography, and writing. 

M: So where do you see yourself in five years?

L: Working a lot less, maybe taking some time for my hobbies. 

M: What makes you happy right now?

L: [long pause] Hmmm... [very long pause] rearranging my apartment, and taking photographs. 

M: Talk to me about drugs. How have they affected your life? Do they still affect your life?

L: Drugs will have a huge effect on my work for the rest of my life, whether I'm using or not. There are lasting consequences for using drugs. It doesn't matter whether I am taking drugs or not, I'll still be paying for my prior use. 

M: How have drugs affected your songwriting?

L: When I'm writing music, I find myself in my head. Whatever dramas or chaotic happenings are going on in my life, I can always find that place inside my head where I see myself as the cleanest, tallest, strongest, wisest person that I can be at that moment. 

M: Do you consider yourself a role model?

L: No. I hope not. I do have a lot to say about preventing people from making stupid decisions. I made a stupid decision and now I'm paying for it. My bed isn't made, I'm tired, I haven't slept well for two weeks. I haven't been laid in a month. I don't have a girlfriend. And I have a warrant for my arrest. Being me is no different than being most anyone else, I guess. 

M: Do you support the idea of legalizing drugs to get treatment closer to users?

L: I don't think any drug that can cause brain damage, failing kidneys, hardening arteries, pain, and suffering should be made available. Drugs are not the way to the light. They won't lead to a fairy-tale life, they lead to suffering. 

M: Was Kurt Cobain a friend of yours? How did his death affect you?

L: [Long pause, visible discomfort] Kurt and I weren't the closest of friends, but we ran in to each other at shows and hung out. I knew him well enough to be devastated by his death. I just don't understand at all. The last time I saw him, he gave me a ride from QFC on Broadway to a friend's house, the whole way there, which was about a fifteen minute drive, he talked about his daughter. For such a quiet person, he was so excited about having a child, he really loved that little girl. About a month later I saw on the news... [long pause] that he was dead. 

M: How has the Seattle music scene changed since Alice's heyday?

L: Musicians worked together more then. We collaborated with other bands more often. There wasn't as much business pressure on bands. It was all about music, about getting your friends to come and see you play. I don't see that same intimacy happening very much today. 

M: Do you think that Seattle is still a hot-bed of talent?

L: I guess so. I've heard some really good industrial music from the Northwest lately. 

M: What's in your CD player at home right now?

L: Ministry, the soundtrack to Bram Stoker's Dracula, the new Hole LP, and the Flaming Lips EP. 

M: What's next for you? Is Mad Season going to tour?

L: Mad Season will do a couple of shows in LA, a couple in New York, and maybe a late night television show. With Alice I'm recording a record, doing some videos, and I guess touring... we don't really know yet. If so, I hope it's a two week tour this time, instead of two painful years.

Happy Birthday Layne..


Black Flag


Black Flag was an American punk rock band formed in 1976 in Hermosa Beach, California. The band was established by Greg Ginn, the guitarist, primary songwriter and sole continuous member through multiple personnel changes in the band. They are widely considered to be one of the first hardcore punk bands.


Black Flag's sound mixed the raw simplicity of the Ramones with atonal guitar solos and frequent tempo shifts. The lyrics were written mostly by Ginn, and like other punk rock bands of the late 1970s and early 1980s, Black Flag voiced an anti-authoritarian and non-conformist message, in songs punctuated with descriptions of social isolation, neurosis, poverty, and paranoia. These themes were explored further when Henry Rollins joined the band as lead singer in 1981. Most of the band's material was released on Ginn's independent label, SST Records.

Dukowski, Rollins, Ginn, Chuck, Cadena 1982 

Fang

Fang is a punk rock band that originated in 1980. Fang was originally part of the punk rock scene in Berkeley, California in the 1980s. The band broke up in 1989 when key member Sam McBride was sent to prison for killing his girlfriend, Dixie Lee Carney. Upon his release, in 1995, McBride changed his name to Sammytown and reformed Fang


Fang's first record under the name 'Fang' was actually more of an experimental record, according to the band, the "Yukon Fang" single. Fang guitarist Tom Flynn and bass player Brian Beattie, his former bandmate from the bands "Tapeworm" and "Safety Patrol", put out "Yukon Fang" as a duo and thus Fang was born

The lineup thus solidified as McBride (vocals), Chris Wilson (bass), Tom Flynn (guitar), and Joel Fox (drums). Together they contributed the song "Fun with Acid" on the Not so Quiet on the Western Front compilation LP. Shortly thereafter, guitarist Tom Flynn created "Boner Records" and released their debut LP and EP Landshark and Where the Wild Things Are.