Posts Tagged ‘heavy metal’

Full Marks – Soul Sanctuary’s Afterlife REVIEWED

Tuesday, December 8, 2009 posted by Scream

Review Of Soul Sanctuary’s Debut Album “Afterlife”

Soul Sanctuary is a six piece alternative metal band from England and we’ve been keeping our eyes on them since the initial  interview that they had with HeadbangToday.com! Afterlife is Soul Sanctuary’s debut album and was produced, engineered, written, sung (screamed), mixed and mastered by one of their lead vocalists Luke Gibson. Heavily talented  to bring us quality heavy metal!

Their demo tracks grew onto me like  a parasite, tapping into the host’s brain, convincing me that this will be an album worthy of purchase. So there I had it. I bought “Afterlife” and waited in great inticipation for its arrival. Upon receiving it, I popped it in and the only thing that kept coming to mind while listening to the entire album twice in a row was “REVIEW” – This album deserves and demands a review that will contain my thoughts and feelings that streams throughout my mind as the tracks play along.

The album explodes with the very first track after which the album is named (or vice versa) “Afterlife“. The intro of “Afterlife” itself already gave me a sense of what I can expect from the rest of the tracks with it’s brain-vibrating screaming, fast paced drumming and ground-breaking riffs. The song well put together with very nice polish that will ensure you the overall quality of the album. It has a beautiful guitar solo backed up with heavy riffing and contains two very apocolyptic-sounding breakdowns near the end which eventually leads to a nice steady decline of solid screaming which halts after the song’s trademark drumbeat.

Game Of Conviction is the second track on their album which reminds me very much of Sevendust with it’s coarse backing vocals and short-bursts of combined musical excellence. It contains yet another beautiful solo which is carried by fast metal drumbeats and kick-ass riffing. The melodic vocals and screaming compliments eachother well in this song which is something not many bands in my experience can get the hang of with two vocalists.

Afterlife’s third track is called Destiny. A new song that I haven’t heard from Soul Sanctuary before while I was enjoying all their demo tracks prior to the album’s release.  It’s chorusses finnish themselves off with decent fast and well composed riffs. Another outstanding solo has managed to embed itself into this song. Their guitarists Ed Stevens and Anthony Montague have really done amazing work with their talents and have put it to a good use. The melodic bass notes serves as a perfect backbone to the song.

Killing Time, the album’s fourth track kicks off with heavy growling and excells towards slow heavy riffs with the drummer crashing his symbols timeously with the heavy riffing. A song that also proves that whispers and screams can be equally powerful. A brilliant guitar solo electrifies you towards heavy growling followed by a very fast and funky, funk,  drum & bass-like bass slapping solo. This song is the shit.

Track no. 5 is Packaged To Sell. It’s been  a personal all-time favourite since I heard the demo version. Some have said that the screaming vocals sound a lot like that of Slipknot’s Corey Taylor… I’ll have to disagree slightly, but I have to give it to Soul Sanctuary. Their screams/growls are indeed pretty awesome! Luke Gibson does an excellent job in his vocal work. I like the way the two vocalists have come up with using melodic singing combined with screaming and packaged it into a pretty heavy album – to sell.

The sixth track called Reflections starts off with a chilled accoustic riff and decent melodic singing from both vocalists. The song then eventually progresses into nice heavy alternative rock and rocks on until it declines back into its accoustic state. A perfect blend. I can see this type of song being played on national radio here in South Africa. It’s probably one of Soul Sanctuary’s ’safest’ songs to be commercialised and released for local radio airtime.

Number 7 – Scars Of You, was added to the album for probably no other reason but to show off each band members’ talent in their own respective department! Eardrum-tampering screams, decent melodic singing, another amazing solo, cool bass tunes with solid riffs and tight drumming is rarely heard of in one song!

REVIEW CONTINUES HERE: http://www.headbangtoday.com/articles/?p=75

Bludjinn Metalfest 2009

Monday, November 16, 2009 posted by Scream

20 Metal bands from Cape Town and the surrounding areas will be performing over two days at the Zone.

This Is The Kind Of Headbang Marathon We’ve Been Waiting for!

LINE UP:

Friday 27th:
18:00 – Doors Open
19:00 – Sadistic Dementia
20:00 – Sabretooth
21:00 – Strident
22:00 – Symphonic Schizophrenia
23:00 – Azrail
00:00 – Revenge By Dawn
01:00 – Matricide

Saturday 28th:
13:00 – Doors Open
14:00 – Sindulgence
15:00 – Lines Of Separation
16:00 – Fearstrike
17:00 – The Ministry Of Lost Souls
18:00 – Deharmonic
19:00 – Stellitius
20:00 – Infanteria
21:00 – Regicide
22:00 – Dark Heritage
23:00 – A Walk With The Wicked
00:00 – Pariah Born

MORE INFO HERE:

Heavy Metal Podcast 2009

Thursday, November 12, 2009 posted by Scream

Official Headbang Today.com Podcast 1

BY:  www.headbangtoday.com

DOWNLOADING INSTRUCTIONS:

Download our first podcast featuring a selection of artists that we have featured, interviewed and reviewed during the coarse of this year.

8 headbanging tracks, conveniently mixed into one metal podcast!

Instructions:

Click The Link Below

1. http://www.mediafire.com/headbang

OR CLICK HERE –>

Download From FileFactory!

2. Headbang!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

TRACKLIST:

~~~~~~~~~~

Track No. – Band Name – Song Title – Album Title – Where to buy it.

1. (00:15sec) The Hollow – The Hollow – Album Coming Soon – http://www.headbangtoday.com/The-Hollow.html

2. (4:30min) Stone Drive – Breathe - A Moment Of Weakness – http://www.myspace.com/stonedrive

3. (8:00min) Juggernaught – Riverside – Act Of Goat – http://rhythmmusicstore.com/store/search.asp?q=juggernaught&x=0&y=0

4. (11:00min) Inner Demons (Featuring Jeff Korn) – Raging Fire – Album Coming Soon

5. (16:15min) Broken Truce – Lying Eyes – Album Coming Soon -

6. (20:13min) Hazy Hamlet – Funeral For A Viking- Forging Metal -http://www.hazyhamlet.com

7. (25:49min) Chromium – Set Me Free – Confessions Of A Hero – http://www.chromium.co.za

8. (30:00min) Soul Sanctuary – Heart Attack – Afterlife – http://www.soulsanctuarymusic.com/buy-now.html

Hatebreed (2009) The Review

Tuesday, October 27, 2009 posted by Scream
Hatebreed 2009Hatebreed 2009

After the album landed on my desk a week ago, the amount of attention I’ve given it was purely minimal up until today. There is probably no better review that can be done on a band and their latest release than a review done by someone who was never really a fan of the band in general. So today I have decided to dissect it, give it a more intense listen and compare it to the personal symptoms that I have been suffering from lately. Symptoms that has recently plagued me with that very metal craving which sent me in pursuit of a remedy… CouldHatebreed be that remedy?

Hatebreed’s self-titled album explodes with “Become The Fuse”. A song with energetic rhythm and tight drumming that blends in well with the song. These are elements that I was actually looking for and the album actually starts off well, giving me that required dosage. The third track “Between Hell And A Heartbeat starts off pretty chilled with a seductive and somewhat mesmerizing intro. It then leads itself into a fast paced and well-constructed song with a decent break that will get any headbanger banging the snot and shit out of his own head at anyHatebreed concert. I can imagine it being a pretty crazy song to see them play live.

“In Ashes They Shall Reap” consists out of one of those sing-along chants that are bound to get the entire crowd to … well … sing along! I can see now whyHatebreed’s live shows are so energetic. In Ashes They Shall Reap got the adrenaline pumping throughout the veins embedded beneath my skin as I could feel my muscles tingling with the desire to break out and start a mosh in this confined office space with colleagues. There WILL be injuries.

Although I am truly satisfied with what’s been drilled into my ears and my being from the tracks I’ve given a proper listen. I knew that I am yet to find a track that wouldn’t apply to my craving as stated earlier. “Hands Of A Dying Man” seems to be that very track with it’s extremely fast drum-tapping and guitar strumming (don’t get me wrong, it’s a song written for headbangers andmoshpit kings in mind, without a doubt.) But the track was over before I even knew it. Jamey Jasta maintains the heaviness of Hatebreed. With his growlish screams and the lyrical content, it would not be statements made any clearer if it was done by any other vocalist.

There is something about “No Halos For The Heartless” that grabbed me. Its heaviness and well-written guitar riffs made this very song stand out among the rest on this album. It consists out of that pureHatebreed anthems that is bound recruit any passing headbanger into the Hatebreed army. “Through The Thorns” with its death-metal like riffing is a good song up until the break-down. But then Hatebreed proved me wrong in my previous sentence and the song swiftly recovers back into it’s metalcore awesomeness.

The album ends with “Escape.” The song that gave me the final missing dosage of Hatebreed’s latest self-titled album. The vocal work in “Escape” varies from death to melodic metal to which I rest my case. The album overall reflects the hard work and dedication thatHatebreed as a band put together for their die-hard fans. As a newcomer, I enjoyed the album, even though I would’ve liked to hear a little bit more of JameyJasta’s talented melodic metal-like vocal work.

I give the new Hatebreed Album 9 out of 10 metal horns. -

In short: Hatebreed proved me wrong on many different levels and they are the exact dosage I needed. Hatebreed personally instructed me yesterday to help the scene grow in South Africa so that we can have the live Hatebreed experience right here in our very own country.

Now that Headbang Today has Hatebreed’s attention, we hope that South Africa will be placed on their next world tour map and I am confident that Hatebreed will be reading this review. Not many reviewers can say that!

- Scream
www.headbangtoday.com

Illegal File Sharing – Metal or Not?

Saturday, October 3, 2009 posted by Scream

Now before you race down to the comment field to abuse this article with a mindless response,  I would just like to let you know that this is not just another blog about the disastrous effects of illegal downloading nor is it an article to embrace it.

I have gone undercover and joined the forums of a notorious illegal file sharing website and got into heated contact with it’s members just to find out whether they think if there is any ’sin’ in obtaining their favourite band’s material straight from someone else’s computer!

To start off, for those that do not really know what file sharing is, well, here you go:

(a) File sharing is the practice of distributing or providing access to digitally stored information, such as computer programs, multi-media (audio, video), documents, or electronic books. It may be implemented in a variety of storage, transmission, and distribution models. Common methods are manual sharing using removable media, centralized computer file server installations on computer networks, World Wide Web-based hyperlinked documents, and the use of distributed peer-to-peer (P2P) networking.

While file sharing is not of itself illegal, the increasing popularity of the mp3 music format in the late 1990s led to the release and growth of Napster and other software that, while designed simply to aid in the sharing of electronic files, in practice led to a huge growth in illegal file sharing: the sharing of copyright protected files without permission. Other popular networks include Gnutella, Gnutella2, eDonkey2000, the now-defunct Kazaa network, and BitTorrent.

Many file sharing networks and services, accused of facilitating illegal file sharing, have been shut down due to litigation by groups such as the RIAA and MPAA. During the early 2000s, the fight against copyright infringement expanded into lawsuits against individual users of file sharing software.

The economic impact of illegal file sharing on media industries is disputed. Copyright holders and publishers refer to studies concluding that unauthorized downloading of movies, music and software is unequivocally damaging the economy, although other studies suggest file sharing is not the primary cause of declines in sales. Illegal file sharing remains widespread, with mixed public opinion about the morality of the practice.

Now that sounds pretty interesting don’t you think? It’s nice to know that you can almost instantaneously go and get hold of your favourite song by just searching for artist’s name and their song title – FOR FREE!

But this is not entirely free, you see. It comes at a cost and that price could ultimately be a total collapse in the music industry in the near future, leaving us with nothing but with unprofessional wannabe artists with cheap self produced and low quality music that will ONLY be available online. Or will it?

That is why I went deeper underground and salvaged the following data straight from the horses’ mouths.  I dare not name the torrent website’s name nor the names of my sources, but the following information can be confirmed by artists themselves, should you wish to. I started the topic off in an aggressive manner in order to get the best out of these illegal downloaders. To my surprise, without me getting flamed nor sworn at, these little critters that dwell in the darkness of the file sharing world posed as no threat to my presence in their community and were very sincere in answering all of my questions.

This is what ‘John Doe’ had to say in response to my inquisitive, yet attacking post, demanding answers as to why they would want to destroy their own favourite bands by not supporting them they way they should be supported:

“Dude, why don’t you go back to those bands and ask them how much of all the dollars that the RIAA is currently suing everyone in existence they are actually seeing. They are not even seeing a cent.

Sorry mate, but I’ll keep downloading as much music as I want, and I will spread it to my friends as well who want to hear it before they make the choice to buy it, and encourage them to do the same with their friends and family.

Oh, by the way, I too come from a line of work where I had not only interviewed a lot of bands, national and interstate, but I managed their shows when they toured, and I know from HANDS ON EXPERIENCE, that file sharing is possibly the one single thing that is keeping bands going at the moment. You don’t want to offer them free promo, then good for you. I can tell you that the small minority who are against it don’t know shit. It’s not piracy that will end all, its the friends of the RIAA and all associated that will do the honors for us.”

I could not believe my eyes. Yes, it made sense by all means, but what still remains hazy is the question as to why bands release albums in the first place then? Surely to earn something for their hard work and dedication in the name of musical entertainment.

‘John Doe’ knew better, and shared his insight with us once again:

“The only reason that they release albums is because the record label pays them 99% of the estimated worth of an album, give them some 5 cents per album sold, gives them enough to barely be able to wipe their ass, then tells them to tour to make a living, which the labels score even more money from.

Seriously mate, I know what I’m on about here, and I’m not trying to be an ass. Any artist who says that pirates made them broke is either a fucking liar, or is sexually involved with the RIAA. I respect that you don’t want to download music, good for you, go and give your money to those who are trying to sue our asses off at the moment, I just think that your reasons aren’t that great. The RIAA is making more money off piracy than we are ‘apparently’ taking from the artists. Now, who is the real criminal? I mean, if you really want me to continue, just ask. While you’re at it, go check out the artists who have started releasing their music under a creative commons, and how much their album sales have soared…”

Fair enough, but there are obviously two sides to any story! What about the bands we’ve featured? That’s right, those awesome bands on HeadbangToday.com. Most of them had something to say about illegal downloading too! Our very first interviewed band were StoneDrive, a very talented and energetic band from France. Below is an excerpt from their interview that they had with us:

Stone Drives InterviewStone Drive’s Interview

“(Fab from Stone Drive) : The music industry is collapsing and the whole music distribution system is changing. It’s pretty hard to make it big now or at least it takes a lot of time and perseverance. If you want to be heard, you gotta play hundreds of gigs, be on the road all year long … that’s the hardest part of it.

HeadbangToday: Speaking of the music industry collapsing…How do you feel about downloading music online?

Stone Drive:
(Dave) : Being on music platforms like ITunes or Napster has become absolutely necessary to exist as a band. We’re on ITunes worldwide and it helped us a lot to reach people around the world. It’s the good side of the music business globalization and the real benefit of internet for musicians.
(Fab) : If you mean illegal downloading, it’s part of the game, so to speak. People, mostly young generations, consider illegal downloading like something normal.
We don’t really care as long as people listen to our music. Selling CDs or MP3s doesn’t pay the rent anyway.”

Well there we have it.  As I said before, the music industry seems to be collapsing no matter how glamorous the big stars try and make it seem. The funny part is that it is all in our own hands as fans. We are left with the decision. Do we want cheap under-produced Internet music in the future or would we rather want to maintain what we have now and regain what we had and make an effort into buying an actual Cd of the respective artist. Not only to support them and keep them going, but also so that future generations will inherit that and also want to build up their own collection of music from their favourite artists in whatever format it will be in years to come. Even if it will only be MP3, spending your hard earned cash makes us appreciate it more anyway.

Oh wait, “John Doe” has more to say:

“File Sharing has opened up the way that we experience music in so many ways. Creative Commons, seriously, look at what Radiohead and NIN are doing at the moment, along with a few others that are seeing what a great tool it is. Make your tracks available for free, see your record sales boost. As many people buy albums today as they ever had. The loss figures are just made up in an attempt to scare people away from downloading.’OH NO’ ‘We’re not gonna have music anymore.’

Piracy in music is the biggest lie in music history. Piracy is a word that was created so that people can make more money for nothing. You think that single mother in Minnesota really was worth 2 million dollars for downloading 27 tracks? And how much of that 2 million dollars did any of those artists see? Nothing.

The RIAA only exists so that Lawyers can have a steady stream of work, and the greedy fuckers that exist within the RIAA can buy more rich cars and houses. What about the artists? They still live on tour buses, eat like shit… So, lets give them some free promotion for their work, maybe a few more records will sell, who knows.

Pirating aint anything to do with ripping people off mate. its about standing against those who are ripping the artist off. The artist is the real victim here, and if you are honestly that pissed off about artists losing out, then why not go and bomb the local head office for Sony Music or something. Think of how much they are ripping the artist off. We aint the villains here mate, they are. You can choose to follow suit with every single bit of propaganda out there, or you can stand up with everyone else and encourage change.”

I don’t remember illegal downloading ever being mentioned as a good “change” in any of Obama’s speeches ut then again, none of us in this article so far are American. So why care about change?  What about self produced albums? YES! We have bands that produce, promote and distribute their own albums to cut the middle man out. That means that these artists can actually earn even more if illegal album downloads are crippled. With this in effect, we can then experience more effort from the bands themselves which will result in even better quality driven material. Now another band pointed out that I am also wrong with my above mentioned statement.

While interviewing extreme metallers, Mind Assault from South Africa, whom also produce their own albums, we’ve learned the following:

HeadbangToday: We’ll be publishing an article soon on the impact that illegal downloading and file-sharing has on the music industry today. Although it’s been embraced by bands such as Radio Head, Slipknot and NIN there seem to be a large majority of bands that still disagree with this. What are your views on illegal downloading of albums?

Mind Assault: With the expense of producing large enough volumes of actual CD stock being so high, downloading serves us very well – legal or not. It increases the reach in getting our music out there and brings attention to our merchandise. We regard the CD market these days as the “follower” rather than the “fan”. There will be loads of fans who like what you do, but followers are the rare breed who will buy all your stuff and show it off to their friends. For those guys, it would be a crime if we did not cater for them, so again, it’s a necessary evil. This does not mean we are discouraging people from buying the CD or paying for their download from a legitimate site – God knows, we need the cash – but we understand that we live in a brave new world.

Creating large stocks of CD’s are a great risk and liability for an underground band. For pop music it may be different… who knows?”

It now seems as if illegal file sharing is a give or take. Once again it is left in our own hands and beliefs. If you still feel illegal downloading is wrong, then you have to remember that bands see it as an opportunity to get their work out there. It’s a medium of exposure, that extra arm that reaches those who wish to try it before they buy it. But if you fully support illegal downloads and it’s the ONLY thing you do, then “John Doe” also has something else for you:

“Ok, lets look at it this way. I will use a real example here. Back when Static X did their album ‘Shadowzone’, their going price was a mere 10k Australian per show. This is all that they are worth. Now, you look at the cost of accommodation in Australia, youre looking at about 150$ per night. For 4 people this is 600$. You then have a staff of 20 – 30 people for a small club tour. Each of these people, depending on experience would get paid some 200$ or so for the night’s work. The qualified would get more. So, lets round that up to say, 4000$, including the cost of a very decent locally booked audio and lighting engineer. Then there is the cost of lighting and audio equipment hire, youre looking at about 3000$ for the night for a fairly average rig that they would carry around per show. Then there is car hire, in Australia, the Toyota Tarago is the vehicle of choice. Youre looking at some 80$ per day to book. Then petrol costs. To drive between cities is cheaper most of the time. Add petrol costs of say 100$ between cities, plus additional hire cars to transport permanent staff. you’re looking at easily an additional 500$ per day. Then you also have the cost of insurance, which I don’t even want to think about this one….

So.. we are looking at 7680$ roughly, before insurance is paid for, plus any additional flights and so on and so forth. For a band of 4 people, you’re looking at that leaving some 5 – 600$ per band member per day. I know less qualified people that earn more.

Then on top of that, their label, who mind you, really should be supporting the artist, takes everything but a measly 5 – 10 cents per record sold. For the average metal band, this generally means nothing more than 2 – 5000$ per year per band member. Whilst the labels will easily take home multi million dollars from an under selling record, and not even give a shit that it hasn’t gone platinum because hey… the CEO gets a new car, who gives a shit? ”

There you have it. You should still support the artist and buy their material if you like it. Whether or not the record label screws them over, if you continue to only download their albums for free and not go to any of their gigs, then the band has lost out whichever way you look at it.

Article Continues here.

Headbang Today!

Saturday, September 26, 2009 posted by Scream

Hello Head Bangers!

This is the complete lowdown and purpose of our existence.


We
will be evolving to become the greatest local band exposing and
supporting community on the face of this planet. There are a number of
South African metal and rock bands that have made it big – whether it was locally or internationally, they still proved themselves worthy in the industry and showed the rest of us that South Africa indeed has potential.

We’ve had bands that grew and established themselves as respected artists in their home-country, but  had to go do their thing overseas for global exposure. Take Seether for example!

HeadbangToday.com
will go to great lengths to rule out the migrating option for local
bands by exposing and promoting them internationally! The world will
soon experience what South Africa has to offer rock-wise and they will
be flocking off to come party here with us to support our vision.

HeadbangToday
is also the playground for all metal, rock and punk rock fans. By this
I mean, it’s open source in it’s own unique and controlled way. If you
have anything to contribute to the site, may it be ideas, suggestions
and content. feel free to shout at scream@headbangtoday.com

I’ve already appointed official members to our site who has the passion for
their music taste and who are willing to contribute to HeadbangToday.com. I’ve recently appointed Sean to administrate our forums and Wraithfiend to review all local bands in his own review section. If you would like to sign up for the army, go ahead, tell me more about yourself by dropping a mail to scream@headbanmgtoday.com If you have any South African bands in mind that we can review, contact Wraith at wraith@headbangtoday.com and give him the heads up. Sean will be doing interviews and managing the forums – So if you have any questions for him, you can shoot a mail to sean@headbangtoday.com.

COME JOIN THE ARMY!

One of our main features of HeadbangToday is of course our own online metal store! It’s been customised to suit all your metal and rock needs
without having to filter through piles of useless products. Visit our
store and support the bands!

Our vision may seem far fetched,
but it sounds like a festival that will rock your skull so violently
that you will find yourself headbanging to the bands on stage against
your own will!

The bands we want there are:

Stone Drive (from France)

Your Name In Neon ( From SA)

Mind Assault (SA)

Inastait (SA)

Broken Truce (SA)

Facing The Gallows (SA)

Taxi Violence (SA)

definately Soul Sanctuary (UK)

Fokofpolisiekar (SA)

When Day Turns Night (SA)

This list will grow along with our vision as well as the funds
for the festival.  Donate to the Headbang Today metal and hard rock
festival  —> here