Alien Ant Farm have premiered a new video for their new song “Bad Attitude.” You can check that out below:
Alien Ant Farm have premiered a new video for their new song “Bad Attitude.” You can check that out below:
Axe Dragger, the new project featuring guitarist Bob Balch (Fu Manchu), drummer Pete Campbell (ex-Pentagram), vocalist Terry Glaze (ex-Pantera), and bassist Fredrik Isaksson (Dark Funeral), will be releasing their self-titled debut album on March 6. An official lyric video for the effort’s title track can be found below:
Balch commented on the single:
“‘Axe Dragger’ was the first song we wrote. When ex-Pentagram drummer Minnesota Pete Campbell reached out to me about collaborating on a metal record, those riffs came out of me moments later. The song pretty much wrote itself. I thought Terry Glaze (ex-Pantera) would sound great on it, so we sent it over to him. When we both heard the vocals and lyrics, we knew we had something special. I mean, he sings the words ‘heavy metal’ in the first verse! Haha. That song lit a fire under all of us and ended up spawning the entire record. Pete then mentioned bringing in Fredrik Isaksson from Dark Funeral on bass. Fredrik absolutely killed it on that track, and at that point the lineup was solidified. The riffs on this song were inspired by the early ’80s metal records I grew up on — Judas Priest, Riot, Maiden, Dio, etc., etc. Hope you dig it!”
Campbell added:
“This was the first track Bob sent me for the project. At first listen, I was like, ‘Okay… I see where this is going.’ I laid down my drum tracks and sent it back. He told me Terry was interested in doing some vocals, and I was stoked. When we got Terry’s vocals back, I knew right away we were onto something — and ten songs later, we had a whole record. Fredrik’s bass playing is ungodly, and he’s the perfect man for the job. Bob is a freakin’ riff machine — such an honor to jam with. I’m super excited for people to hear this band. Proud of the music and the guys involved. Hail metal!”

“Axe Dragger” Track Listing:
01. “Axe Dragger”
02. “Give You The Rope”
03. “Fight Another Day”
04. “Iron Rider”
05. “Eat Me From The Inside”
06. “Shock ‘Em Dead”
07. “El Toro”
08. “The Damned Will Cry”
09. “Fire In The Madhouse”
10. “Death Is Calling My Name”
Pig Destroyer and Deadguy have announced some May East Coast shows. Sex Prisoner and Mellow Harsher will open. Here’s the dates:
05/21 Long Island, NY – Amityville Music Hall
05/22 Garwood, NJ – Crossroads
05/23 Baltimore, MD – Maryland Deathfest (Pig Destroyer only)
Kiko Loureiro (ex-Megadeth, etc.) is the executive producer of an upcoming film called “Theory Of Mind ” The movie is being directed by Leo Liberti and it will star Kane Hodder (“Friday The 13th”) and Bill Moseley (“Devil’s Rejects”). A 2026 release is planned. Here’s a synopsis:
“Seven influencers from around the world (rivals and ideological opposites) are invited to participate in a global social experiment for the launch of the most advanced A.I.-powered smartphone ever created. But when a critical bug is activated, the experiment spirals out of control, turning technology into a deadly psychological test.”
Black Stone Cherry have announced the launch of their All I’m Dreamin’ Of Foundation. The organization will “help fund and champion community arts and music programs.” The band said the following about the foundation:
“This is something we have been passionate about and wanted to make happen for some time, and we thought this was as great a time as any to launch it.”
Amorphis have premiered a new video for their new song “Crowned In Crimson.” The track, which features frontman Tomi Joutsen’s daughter Iida, was recorded as the theme for a new action movie called “Son Of Revenge – The Story Of Kalevala.” That film will debut in Finland on January 16.
Guitarist Esa Holopainen commented:
“Director Antti Jokinen got in touch with us and briefly told us about his ambitious film project. We arranged a meeting with him, during which we were able to see visual material from the film and go through the script. Antti hoped that Amorphis would create the film’s theme song — a project we agreed to immediately.”
Director Antti Jokinen added:
“Amorphis’ music feels like strength wrapped in beauty — heavy enough to shake the landscape, yet poetic. Their music really lifts my spirit into the world of Kalevala myths and its characters. Exactly what I was looking for, when thinking about the theme song for my film. I’m very pleased they agreed to do it.”
Lionheart have premiered a new song titled “Salt The Earth.” This track is from the band’s new album, “Valley Of Death II,” which will be released on January 9.
As previously reported, Zachary Baker, aka Avenged Sevenfold’s Zacky Vengeance, recently released “Dark Horse,” the first single from his upcoming country album. Now, during a new interview with Rock Feed, he further discussed the project, calling it “very real.”

Baker said the following about the venture:
“Honestly, it just came from a place inside of me that I didn’t fully know existed. It was just this longing to create something using my own voice, telling my own story, adhering to the rules that I wanted to follow, which are far different than you’d get from a lot of producers or a lot of record labels, and just taking everything that I’ve ever learned — from the entirety of the first time I ever picked up a guitar to the first time we ever filled up our van with gas and drove on the back roads using a shitty old Rand McNally map to get to the next city, and driving across the country, stopping every single place, the fights we would get into, the stories that we would have, drunken nights, just everything. I wanted to capture all of that, stories of falling in love and stories of loss and all the heartache — everything that’s real about me, but I wanted to sing it in my own voice, which is something that I never really loved. I never really liked my own voice, so I was, like, ‘I don’t have one of these great voices,’ like a great rock singer or a great country artist that have all these pitch-perfect vocals. And then I was, like, ‘But I gotta get it outta me.’ And I didn’t know why or how it even came about, but it was literally like a therapy session.”
He went on to discuss the musical direction:
“This is very real. It’s not a humor album. It’s not contrived in any way. I’m not gonna throw on a cowboy hat and boots and try and make my way to Nashville. I’m going to remember that I love going to Nashville. I named my son Tennessee. I’ve spent vacations in Gatlinburg and I’ve been to West Virginia and North Carolina and Texas and Georgia, and I love being in Oregon and fishing. And I’ve done everything in between. I’ve lived a lot of life, and now I get to tell my story. I get sing it in my own voice. It’s gonna piss a whole lot of people off. Everything about this is great. Like, what am I gonna do with it? And then I would show some people, and they would be, like, ‘Huh.’”
He continued when asked about the initial reaction people had to the new material:
“In the very first few songs, the reaction was completely, like, ‘Huh. Yeah. Okay, okay. Well, when are you guys gonna write the next ‘Hail To The King’?’ And I was, like, ‘Never. That’s not how we operate.’ And it kind of made me get in my own head a little bit. I started developing a little bit of timidness about, ‘No one’s gonna take this seriously.’ I kind of got depressed about it. And then I just found myself, throughout the early days of bringing this to life and thinking about how it was really helping me write these songs and helping me feel better in these therapy sessions and getting stuff off my chest, I kind of got depressed again. I started drinking a whole lot, and I was, like, ‘I’m just not gonna do anything. I’ll wait till AVENGED goes back on tour.’ And it’s kind of like waiting to die.
AVENGED, we kind of had this kumbaya moment where we’re like, let’s just be fearless and let’s make [the 2023 album] ‘Life Is But A Dream…’ and do whatever the we want and make the art alongside Wes Lang, who’s one of the greatest artists that we love, and let’s make these songs that people are not know what to expect… And then next thing you know, we’re playing in front of 40,000 people in India and selling out stadiums in Indonesia and headlining and selling out Rock In Rio off an album that the radio stations wouldn’t even play. And it’s just, like, we have fans that respect what we do. And it gave me this excitement, like, ‘Hey, stop drinking yourself to death. Find purpose in every day. Finish these songs. When you get sad, when you’re depressed, put the bottle down, march up in the studio, start saying your truth. Tell your story. Be honest and be open. You’re not perfect.’
I’m so far from perfect as a person, but I’m very much myself. I’m uniquely me. My music sounds like me. It’s coming from my voice. It’s my story. I was, like, ‘What do I like about it?’ I love that it’s imperfect. I haven’t changed the guitar strings on this old Telecaster in three months. They’re rusty. My fingers are bleeding. It’s perfect. I love how it sounds. This thing’s a little bit out of tune. I can’t really hit that note. My voice is cracking. The mic’s a little too hot. There’s a buzz on it. It’s perfect. I like this. I love this.”
Baker also added that he tried to stay away from outside influences:
“For this first attempt at it, it had to be me finding myself, creating and then breaking any rules that I thought existed. And I didn’t wanna get into a studio with a producer. I didn’t want the input. I didn’t want people to tell me what is possible and what’s not possible. I knew it would be dead in the water because the second that I opened up and showed it certain people — and this isn’t my band, by the way; this is management or friends or whatever — they instantly shut it down. They didn’t like it. They didn’t get it. They didn’t understand it. I was, like, ‘I can’t show this to anybody until I do it.’”
He continued when asked if those people were viewing his music “from a predominantly business lens”:
“Of course. Of course. And it’s been the bane of our existence for so long. People look at bands as, ‘Oh, you did ‘Hail To The King’. It has the most amount of streams. We need another ‘Hail To The King’.’ It’s, like, that’s not how it works. We didn’t set out to write ‘A Little Piece Of Heaven’ to try and mimic some other hit song. We didn’t write ‘Hail To The King’ with the intention of trying to write some hit. We didn’t write ‘Bat Country’. Our songs are crazy. They’re ambitious. ‘The Stage’… It’s not how it works.”
He also discussed his album release plans:
“I really wanna get it out early-ish next year, maybe February, maybe March. I’m so excited to share it, and I don’t have this hard-pressed timeline. I know it’s important. I love the artwork. I love the idea of putting out a vinyl record. All that’s getting built now. Everything’s completely finished. And it’s just giving it enough time for people to hear ‘Dark Horse’ and make their determination on if it’s sincere enough for them. If they like it, if they hate it, if they find it to be gimmicky — that’s just not gonna happen. That’s one thing that’s not gonna happen. They’re gonna hear in there and say, ‘Okay, this is real. There’s sincerity behind this. This is a side of Zack that we didn’t fully know. But it makes sense.’”
[via Blabbermouth]
During a recent interview with AL.com, Carla Harvey opened up about her departure from Butcher Babies. According to her, she was “kind of squeezed out” of the band.

Harvey said the following:
“I couldn’t do a tour [in the fall of 2023] because I had a serious eye injury and they went and did a tour without me. Then it was, like, ‘Well, we’ll just do the band by ourselves.’ When you have put your heart and soul into something for so long and you do get kind of squeezed out of it, there’s a moment when you’re, like, ‘I can either lay down and not do anything else, or I’m not gonna let someone else tell me when I’m fucking done doing what I do.’”
She went on to say her husband Charlie Benante (Anthrax) inspired her to launch her new project The Violent Hour:
“He was, like, ‘No, get out of bed. Fuck that. We’re gonna write an album. Charlie’s excitement about it was really instrumental in my excitement. He would be playing guitar riffs in the morning with our morning coffee.”
Chat Pile will be releasing a new 7″ single through Sub Pop on February 6. The record will include a new song titled “Masks” and a cover of Nirvana’s “Sifting.” Pre-orders can be found via SubPop, Bandcamp, and europe.subpop.com. Another variant will also be available at live shows.

Chat Pile commented:
“It’s a true dream to put out a single on Sub Pop, and our new song ‘Masks’ hopefully honors the spirit of the mythical, sometimes mystical, city of Seattle. Thanks in part to the movie Hype, we have long been obsessed with Seattle, the American underground of the late ‘80s, and Sub Pop and their tools of world domination. Everything we learned about packaging Chat Pile we learned from Sub Pop co-founders Jonathan Poneman and Bruce Pavitt.
We wanted to cover a song from the early Sub Pop era, and something off ‘Bleach‘ seemed the obvious choice. Songs like ‘Paper Cuts,’ ‘Negative Creep,’ and especially ‘Sifting’ are fairly lateral to the type of sounds we make with Chat Pile. (Perhaps next time we’ll take on a TAD song!)
“P.S. – Fuck ICE.”
You must be logged in to post a comment.