Archive for the Reviews Category

Texas In July: The Review

Posted in All Metal, Artist Watch, News, Releases, Reviews with tags , , , , , , , , , on October 22, 2012 by Randy

The album explodes with the blistering tune “Cry Wolf,” which consists of every sound they have used in the past, just more refined. Vocalist Alex Good hasn’t let up one bit on his eardrum pounding vocals, but has added a toned down raspy growl accentuated by screams and a bit of a yell on the side…still bringing the intensity and passion.  The magnificent guitar work that is displayed on this album is like nothing they have ever done before.  Christian Soyer and Chris Davis have busted out a melodic sound on a majority of the songs.  “Crux Lust” and the single “Bed of Nails” are just brutal, technical songs, that highlight another instrumental aspect that makes TIJ one of the best metal bands on the charts: the beats laid down by drummer Adam Gray.

Texas In July” might just be one of the best albums released this year, currently holding its own near the top with a highly notable band, As I Lay Dying.  So cash your paycheck, get to the store (or iTunes) and purchase this beautiful work of art that will keep your head banging for hours.

Band: Texas In July

Album: Texas In July   ‘self titled’

Label:  Equal Vision Records

www.texasinjuly.net

Written by: Logan Rendulic     Edited by:  Randy Hall     © TheRockTribune.com

TheRockTribune’s coverage of the 2012 Rockstar Energy Drink Uproar Fest

Posted in All Metal, Artist Watch, News, Photos, Reviews with tags , , , , , , , , on September 5, 2012 by Randy

2012 marks the third year for the Rockstar Energy Drink Uproar Festival, and as the two prior, it’s a must see for all.  This year’s line up is packed with talent, from bands like Candlelight Red and P.O.D. on the side stages, to the big boys on the main stage such as Staind, Godsmack, and Shinedown.  A classic display of old and new, and being the last big tour of the summer, this may be the only thing that’ll carry you through winter until it all starts over in the spring.

Second stages tend to be where the fan/artist intimacy resides, as it gives the fans a chance to get as close as their heart’s desire and go nuts with the Gods on stage.  2012’s side stages were off the charts in Pittsburgh, PA and will continue to be throughout the rest of the tour as long as the fans show up ready to party and give the bands energy to feed off of.  The Ernie Ball and Jager stages didn’t have an act that was disappointing…every band walked out on stage like they owned the place and threw down a performance to back up that attitude.  Two of the most impressive acts were Candlelight Red on the Jager stage and P.O.D. on the Ernie ball stage, with CLR being fairly new to the game…they may have won “most impressive.”  They stepped out with a fairly small group of people in the pit, but after their second or third song they had drew an enormous crowd…real fist pumping, “heart beating out of the chest” mayhem.   Old school nu-metalers P.O.D, a band everyone knows, had the task of headlining the side stages.  They straight up set the tone for everyone on the main stage with ease and passion that has fueled them for years and marked them as one of the top three performances of the whole day.  If an act has to be labeled as someone who needs to “step it up,” then the award goes to Deuce.  The performance they had put on was decent, but for someone who the media and radio stations hype up so much, it didn’t meet expectations.

Main stage acts included Staind (3 consecutive albums debuted at #1) and Godsmack, but let’s not forget Adelitas Way.  They are the first band to come out and “break in” the main stage at every city on this tour.  The entire band is crowd friendly and makes sure the fans have fun and enjoy themselves as much as they do.  As previously mentioned… Staind, always a stellar and consistent performance, (even though Aaron Lewis sings about being a country boy from time to time) is still relevant to hard rock. Godsmack also threw down, with Sully Erna wheeling out (recorded drums on Godsmack’s first album) a complete second drum set, rattling off drum solos alongside drummer Shannon Larkin.  When they stepped off stage it left the entire venue with mouths wide open and set the bar awfully high for headliner Shinedown. Their performance was sadly the low point of the day…the band just didn’t show up with a great set list and had a lack luster show that had some fans leaving before it was even half way over.  It doesn’t look good when you’re the “main attraction” and you can’t keep everyone’s attention.  But maybe someone should tell front man Brent Smith that the year is 2012 and he should be banging his head since he’s a rocker, not attempting to shake his hips like Elvis.  Hats off to Rockstar Energy Drink for putting together another great line up this year.  All that’s left is to sit back and wonder what next year will behold.

-Logan Rendulic, © TRT 2012

 http://www.rockstaruproar.com/

Candlelight Red: TheRockTribune Exclusive

Posted in 2012 Interviews, All Metal, Artist Watch, New Music, News, Reviews with tags , , , , , , on September 5, 2012 by Randy

TRT’s Logan Rendulic had the chance to hop on Candlelight Red‘s bus at the 2012 Uproar Fest’s Pittsburgh stop.  Check out the details on this up and coming band, their new EP Demons, the 2012 Uproar Fest, and CLR’s once in a lifetime opportunity with KISS.

LISTEN BELOW!

[audio:http://www.divshare.com/direct/19491314-c1e.mp3%5D

Check out tour dates below:

date city/state venue/description  
9/7 Clarkston, MI DTE Energy Music TheatreRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/8 Noblesville, IN Klipsch Music CenterRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/9 Cuyahoga Falls, OH Blossom Music CenterRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/11 Raleigh, NC Time Warner Cable Pavilion At Walnut CreekRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/12 Atlanta, GA Aaron’s Amphitheatre at LakewoodRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/13 Tampa, FL 1-800-ASK-GARY AmphitheatreRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/15 The Woodlands, TX Cynthia Woods Mitchell PavilionRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/16 Dallas, TX Gexa Energy PavilionRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/18 Englewood, CO Comfort Dental AmphitheatreRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/19 Salt Lake City, UT USANA AmpitheatreRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/21 Post Falls, ID Greyhound Park and Event CenterRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/22 Auburn, WA White River AmphitheatreRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/23 Ridgefield, WA Sleep Country AmpitheaterRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/25 Nampa, ID Idaho Center AmphitheaterRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/29 Phoenix, AZ Ashley Furniture HomeStore PavilionRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival
9/30 Albuquerque, NM Hard Rock Casino Presents: The PavilionRockstar Energy Drink UPROAR Festival

 

www.candlelightred.com

www.facebook.com/candlelightred

www.twitter.com/#!/CandlelightRed

 

Hyro Da Hero: The Rock Tribune Interview

Posted in 2012 Interviews, Artist Watch, New Music, News, Reviews with tags , , , , , , on August 13, 2012 by Randy
[audio:http://www.divshare.com/direct/19343941-576.mp3%5D

Song Credits:  Man In My City, Hyro Da Hero, 2012 Stereo Bang Media

We Still PopularHyro Da Hero, 2012 Stereo Bang Media

Check out TRT’s quick review here.

Hyro’s Bio from  www.hyrodahero.com :

Seasons come and go. Trends pop and deflate. Careers rise and fall. Genres of music live and die. Once in awhile, an artist steps up who doesn’t quite follow the cycle. He doesn’t pay heed to “What’s cool.” He doesn’t give a shit about “Who’s hot.” He doesn’t follow the zeitgeist but, rather, the zeitgeist follows him.

Hyro Da Hero is about to flip rap upside down, inside out and all around.

Hyro Da Hero spins his own cycle of hip hop on his debut album Birth, School, Work, Death. Hyro loads rock ‘n’ roll attitude into explosive, engaging and enthralling rap music. With the crunch of a power chord and the snap of a rhyme, the Houston-bred Los Angeles-based MC spits pure fire. Produced by Ross Robinson—the man behind Korn, Slipknot and At the Drive-in’s legendary debuts—Birth, School, Work, Death sounds like Nas fronting Rage Against the Machine.

Hyro’s band—Daniel Anderson [guitar, Idiot Pilot], Paul Hinojos [bass, At The Drive-In/Sparta/The Mars Volta] and Blood Brothers’ Cody Votolato [guitar] and Mark Gajadhar [drums]—certainly have the pedigree to pummel as well. Guttural riffs feed into razor-sharp rhymes, building a sound that’s as introspective as it is infectious. Hyro da Hero fires off one aural grenade after another whether it’s violent punk-funk vibrancy of “Sleeping Giants” or the sugary bitch-slap of “We Still Popular.” Across the album, Hyro experiments with a myriad of styles from the psyched-out pop of “Man in My City” to his call-to-arms, “Grudge,” where he proudly declares, “I ain’t Lil Wayne.”

This is hip hop like you’ve never heard.

About his enigmatic sound, Hyro comments, “I always look to the underground. That’s where the honesty comes from. Genuine rap and rock go hand-in-hand, but no one has done it like this. It’s raw, and it’s real.”

That raw and real soul hypercharges “Section 8,” which breaks into a cathartic freakout that’s beautifully unsettling. In the same breath, Hyro can spit out witty and righteously brilliant observations of popular culture on “We Still Popular,” featuring Tony Royster Jr. [Jay-Z] behind the drum kit. After a “Sweet Child O’ Mine”-style guitar lead, Hyro examines everything wrong with Hollywood. He delves into the song revealing, “That’s about how easy it is to get fame these days, but it’s all bullshit. The Kim Kardashian’s and Lindsay Lohan’s all fall down eventually, but it’s sad that this is our pop culture. I’m happy to be regular, but I’m going to speak my mind.”

However, Hyro is far from regular. He’s been dazzling the hip hop and rock fans alike with his independently released mixtapes Gangsta Rock [2007], Rock N’ Roll Gangsta [2008] and Belo Horizonte [2009]. Those mixtapes have been downloaded in excess of 100,000 times, and Hyro received glowing acclaim from tastemakers such as Alternative Press, My Old Kentucky Blog, ARTISTdirect.com, Blabbermouth.net, AbsolutePunk.net and many more. However, there’s nothing quite like seeing Hyro live. He’s rocked stages worldwide with 50 Cent, Cypress Hill, Deftones, Staind, Halestorm, Hatebreed and countless other rock and rap acts. He adds, “It all really goes down on stage. You need to hear and see this live.”

Hyro’s proper debut, Birth, School, Work, Death taps into something that’s been missing in rock and rap. “Ross Robinson pulled a lot out me. He pushed me to the edge, and I was able to realize everything I’d always dreamed my music would sound like with his help. It got intense, but it was all worth it, and I’ve got a record that’s going to knock the world on its ass.”

In the end, Hyro screams for revolution on “Beam Me Up,” and it’s a fitting declaration. This is time to break the cycle. This is time for Hyro Da Hero. — Rick Florino (Dolor, Author), October 2010