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Johnny Orlando Jr.'s Antibiotic Resistant Metal Show
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Greetings, Johnny Orlando, Jr. here with the definitive top 20 songs of 2009. 20 - Rusty Eye - “Somnambulist Possession” off of “Possessor”19 - Lamb of God - “Contractor” off of “Wrath”18 - Daath - “Day of Endless Light” off of “The Concealers”17- Korpiklaani - “Bring Us Pints of Beer” off of “Karkelo”16 - Cannibal Corpse - “A Cauldron of Hate” off of “Evisceration Plague”15 – Warbringer - “Forgotten Dead” off of “Waking into Nightmares”14 - Nile - “Utterances of the Crawling Dead” off of “Those Whom The Gods Detest”13 - 3 Inches of Blood - “At the Foot of the Great Glacier” off of “Here Waits Thy Doom.”12 - Kreator - “Destroy What Destroys You” off of “Hordes of Chaos”11 - Behemoth - “The Seed Ov I” off of “Evangelion”10 - Municipal Waste - “Relentless Threat” off of “Massive Aggressive”9 - Immortal - “Hordes of War” off of “All Shall Fall.”8 – Hatebreed - “In Ashes They Shall Reap” off of “Hatebreed”7 – Skeletonwitch - “Stand Fight and Die” off of “Breathing the Fire”6 - Dying Fetus - “Shepherd’s Commandment” off of “Descend Into Depravity”5 - Novembers Doom - “Into Night's Requiem Infernal” off of their album of the same name4 - Jungle Rot - “Invincible Force” (Destruction cover) off of “What Horrors Await”3 - Hatebreed - “Every Lasting Scar” – “Hatebreed”2 - Dagon - “Into the North” off of “Terraphobic”1 – Mastodon - “The Last Baron” off of “Crack the Skye”Here’s to a brutal 2010!
Top 20 Songs of 2009
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By Johnny Orlando, Jr.Highly touted as the future of death metal, does England’s Trigger The Bloodshed have the chops to match wits with Johnny Orlando, Jr., the World’s Leading Metal Journalist?Vocalist Jonny Burgan took up the task and reveals some of what makes him tick, the ultimate goals of the band and why he’d love to date a girl with a fake arm.1. When did Trigger The Bloodshed form and where?Trigger The Bloodshed formed in the year 2006, the idea came together between Rob Purnell (Guitar) and Martyn Evans (Guitar) in a practice room based in Bath, after both acknowledging each other’s penchant for death metal.2. What most inspires your playing and writing?Playing live, our inspiration lies in precision and brutality, that which seems to have been lost within some modern death metal bands, we really push to be as tight as possible when we play. In terms of writing, we just like to write heavy fuckin’ songs, songs that will rip you up, but at the same time, songs that get you hooked, that you can listen to over and over again.3. What is your next favorite type or genre of music, after metal?Personally for me at the moment, underground hip-hop, some of the guys who live for it are incredible, not only with the way they place what they say, but the manner in which they do, and they are awesome lyricists.4. What is your ultimate goal as a band?Just to keep doing what we’re doing, playing sick as fuck shows with bands like Dying Fetus and Suffocation, and hopefully to be up there with them, as one of the bands you see live and you just think, fuck… That is incredible.5. Are fake boobs on a gal a dealbreaker? How about a fake arm with a hook on it?Fuck fake boobs.A fake arm with a hook on it - all the way. Think about the crazy stuff you/she could do with that :O, you could zip wire almost everywhere, she’d be a badass pick pocket.6. Give me a quote from your favorite movie.“I’m gonna be a mighty king – enemies beware.” – The Lion KingThe Lion King is best fuckin film ever. Not so much of a quote, but it should be allowed, and will be.7. What movie quote do you hear too much?None really, most of the quotes I hear are made up, like the story of the chicken man, he is an odious beast of man, who stalks, and rapes woodland found chickens.“YOU JUST KEEEP ONNNNN CLUCKIN”8. What is something you hate to keep in your pocket?Pockets.9. Are fish and chips really that popular where you live in the U.K.?Nah, Thai food is better. And pretty much every other kind of food, except for fish and chips.10. What is your favorite destructive natural force?Toss up between volcanoes and earthquakes, their both pretty savage, I have yet to experience one though.11. What were you doing the last time you used spray paint?Spray painting.12. How would having three distinct human sexes impact gender relations?There were three in the bed, and the little one said, roll over… Roll over.13. If you could fast forward to another year, what year would y...
TRIGGER THE BLOODSHED: 21 Question Salute
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By Johnny Orlando, Jr.Believer hails from a region of Pennsylvania Joey Daub (Drums) feels says is probably best known for its proximity to the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant, site of a headline-grabbing meltdown disaster in 1979. Daub recalls the eerie feeling that March day that they let school out commanding the students simply to “go home.” He arrived home to find the car packed and ready to leave at a moment’s notice. Although the crisis was eventually averted and no casualties resulted, Daub’s surreal experience of cruising on his skateboard on the empty streets of an ironic pre-apocalyptic landscape still resonates today.Instead of choosing to work for Mr. Burns, however, Daub and Kurt Bachman (Guitar/Vocals) formed Believer in the late 1980s and garnered an international following before calling it quits in 1994. Prior to the recent St. Patrick’s Day release of Gabriel, it has been over fifteen years since Believer’s last studio album, Dimensions, was issued. Joey Daub has shouldered increasing responsibility in the interim; however, his desire to make neck-breaking thrash has never faltered.Believer’s resurrection after this extended hiatus was actually the result of serendipitous circumstances. It just so happened that Bachman moved back near Daub and was at a point in his life that he had the time and desire to get back together with Joey to jam. Even though more than a decade had drifted past since he had last hung out with Kurt, Daub felt as though it had only been “fifteen or sixteen days.” At the onset, Bachman and Daub had no real plans or expectations; however, it soon became apparent that they had a storehouse of new material just begging to be unleashed in what would eventually comprise Gabriel.Back at the time Dimensions was released in 1993, CDs were king, cassette tapes were still widely traded and most personal computers buzzed along with 486 processors. Internet connections were strictly dial-up, frustratingly slow and any notion of downloadable songs was more a pipedream than an inevitable music industry game changer.As products of this era, Daub and Jeff King (Keyboards/Programming) have fond memories and hold a personal preference for the packaging which accompanied the physical recordings standard in those bygone days. King especially looked forward to staring at the album cover and reading along with the lyrics, something that is not so easy to do nowadays away from a computer monitor.Daub believes that album artwork and packaging is “even more important” in an ever-increasing digital age and that feels that Believer was committed to producing first-rate packaging to accompany and compliment the music of Gabriel. They called upon Eye Level Studios to create the album's artwork and were extremely pleased with the results. Inviting incredulity, Gabriel’s cover art is actually a photograph depicting a live model – donning horns and body paint – that was produced without the use of Photoshop or any other tricks. Believer feels strongly their fans deserve an enhanced music buying experience and have tried to deliver with the imagery for Gabriel.As for genre labels, King just feels that these labels are “not very helpful” and Daub feels that having been originally marketed as “Christian thrash” provided some challenging situations in which they felt they had to prove themselves as proficient thrash outfit. Believer, however, prefers not to be categorized at all although they understand that some people may interpret particular lyrics in a particular way. Daub simply urges their fans to “think for themselves” ...
BELIEVER: IF THE MEEK GET EARTH, WE WANT MARS
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By Johnny Orlando, Jr.“Occam’s Razor” is the theory that the barest, rawest, simplest answer is typically the correct one. London’s Razor of Occum can be described accordingly as a band that, according to Alex Antoniou (Bass/Backing Vocals), simply wants to “drink and thrash till death.” So cheerio – pour me a pint!Razor of Occam played their first show as an official band in 1998 and as inspired by Crocodile Dundee, Matt Schneemilch (Vocals/Guitars) and Ian Gray (Guitars) set off on their own “bushman invasion,” leaving behind the south Australian desert to conquer Europe in the form of a black/thrash outfit. Fast-forward eleven years and you will find Razor of Occam’s latest album, Homage to Martyrs, having been inspired by the lives and deaths of boundary-pushing secular scientists and thinkers that would never be considered “martyrs” in the traditional spiritual context.Antoniou, in particular, finds these scientists and philosophers so fascinating due to the uncanny interplay of genius and madness inherent in their work and personas. In keeping with the spirit of Occam’s Razor, he subscribes to the trappings of parsimony and being able to express oneself “with the minimum use of words.” For instance, Antoniou, with no further explanation, refuses to eat maple syrup at breakfast yet loves Britian’s “vile” supermarket sausages cooked over an open flame.Alex looks deep into various states of mind for musical inspiration. He feels that these varied states allow “riffs to expand and genuinely represent the mood the composer has been at that very moment.” He also looks to books for lyrical exploration and is genuinely curious as to why none of American horror writer H. P. Lovecraft’s books have been made into a decent movie yet. Cthulu Mythos anyone?So what else is there to know about Alex Antoniou? First, Antoniou likes to refer to himself as the “dodgy Greek.” If given a week to live as a woodland animal, Antoniou would jump at the chance to be a hibernating bear. He hopes to see the year that contact is actually achieved with extraterrestrials so he can witness the uncertain outcome. Interestingly, “running out of booze” tops his list as the creepiest thing he’s experienced in the woods. His favorite late night food is greasy kebobs - mainly because they are the only thing available in London after midnight. And finally, “Say hello to my little friend!” is Alex’s favorite movie quote. It’s hard to say for sure, but Tony Montana would either love Razor of Occam’s no nonsense attitude or would ruthlessly fill them full of holes for making his ears bleed.Antoniou is not saying whether a North American tour is in the works for Razor of Occam but he has hinted that we might see Destroyer 666 on this side of the pond in the foreseeable future. Razor of Occam’s third full-length release and Metal Blade debut, Homage to Martyrs, is available now.___________________________________________________________________________________Johnny Orlando, Jr. is the world’s leading metal journalist. www.metaljohnny.com
Razor of Occam: Drink and Thrash Till Death
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By Johnny Orlando, Jr.Aldous Huxley once said, "After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music." Rusty Eye is hopeful that exposure to their music will evoke such emotion or, at the very least, split your skull in half like a machete bisecting an earthworm.Like so many other metal acts, Rusty Eye played its first show ever in 1995 at a school Christmas party in Mexico. Okay fine, maybe that is not a terribly common starting point, however, Rusty Eye has come a long way since that first performance - both literally and figuratively.Rusty Eye decided to pick up roots and head to Hollywood, despite the hoards of loyal fans that comprised the Mexican metal scene. The band simply found the lack of music industry support for heavy metal to be rather disenchanting. The bigger Mexican labels had no appetite for real metal and would not consider signing a band that did not sing its lyrics in Spanish. These poseur labels mainly promoted boy bands “disguised as real rock bands.” And frankly, Rusty Eye feels that going back to Mexico “would be like going back to square one.”As a threshold matter, Rusty Eye believes that the corrosion of perception that pervades life in this world is beneficial and affords the aware with “a new way of seeing things in a different reality.” In this regard, Rusty Eye draws on horror film imagery and Existentialism for inspiration and lays down a sound that is progressive, provocative and increasingly cited as “hard-to-define.” And that’s the way they want it. To wit, who else but Miss Randall would encourage a cannibalistic captor to continue devouring the flesh of her lower leg?With this said, Rusty Eye is a band firmly grounded in the present. Yet, the one word the band would like to use more in casual conversation is “imagine.” Imagine Miss Randall sitting still for a tattoo session to complete her Dario Argento-inspired sleeve whilst she dreams of letting the horror master kill her on film. Imagine Phantasm’s Tall Man yelling “Booooyyyy!!!!” in your direction as your legs turn to jelly and prevent your escape. Imagine a world not run by God and money. Imagine metal music featuring violins and Indian tabla. Imagine a world where a road- weary metal band can actually be discriminating in their breakfast choices. This is Rusty Eye’s reality.Rusty Eye is on the verge of breaking their fifth release, Possessor, which promises 13 signature tracks and an increasingly polished sound. The artwork for the album has been done by renowned artist, Joe Petagno, best-known for creating Motörhead’s iconic mascot Snaggletooth.Keep an eye out for Possessor this spring as Rusty Eye continues their quest to express the inexpressible. In the meantime, you might run in to Rusty Eye hanging out at the world famous Rainbow Bar & Grill…just follow the trail of empty Casillero del Diablo bottles.You can find Rusty Eye at :www.myspace.com/rustyeye www.youtube.com/rustyeyevideos.
Rusty Eye: A Corroded Perception
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Barney Greenway has so much to say that it would be impossible to cut it into our usual 5 minutes, so we're releasing our Napalm Death show as a series of Bits O' Johnny. We'll be posting a new bit of this interview every day for the next week or so. Dig it! And be sure to snag your copy of Napalm Death's new album TIME WAITS FOR NO SLAVE.
Napalm Death Interview
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A bonus bit of Johnny Orlando Jr.'s Antibiotic Resistant Metal Show featuring Ted Lundström and Johan Hegg of viking death metal band Amon Amarth. Recorded at the Chicago House of Blues during their winter 2007 tour with Sonic Syndicate and Himsa.
Amon Amarth - Bits O' Johnny
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An interview with Michael Sochynsky, Pete The Roadie and Hamilton Jordan of extreme electro-grind metalers Genghis Tron. Recorded at Reggie's Rock Club on the Chicago stop of their tour with The Red Chord and Baroness.
Genghis Tron Interview
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Learn about freeloading, UFOs and parenting as I interview Dez Fafara and Jeff Kendrick of Devil Driver. Recorded at the Chicago stop of their 2008 tour with Napalm Death.
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I manage to pry out the deep secrets of southern prog-sludge-metalers Baroness. And we also play a game of Pictionary. Recorded at Reggie's Rock Club on the Chicago stop of their spring 2008 tour with Converge, The Red Chord and Genghis Tron.
Baroness Interview
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My interview with Guy Kozowyk about The Red Chord's metal from the 22nd century. Recorded at Reggie's Rock Club on the Chicago stop of their spring 2008 tour with Converge, Baroness and Genghis Tron.
The Red Chord Interview
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The world's leading metal journalist, JOHNNY ORLANDO JR., interviews Dave Peters and Mark Choiniere of straight edge metalcore heroes THROWDOWN in the latest installment of the Antibiotic Resistant Metal Show. They discuss being compared to Pantera, their social consciousness, and their cover of Baby Got Back. Recorded during the Chicago stop of the Scum of the Earth Tour with Soilwork, Through The Eyes Of The Dead and War of Ages. The entire 6-minute interview can be viewed below, and click here if you'd like to play Throwdown: The Crossword Puzzle!Throwdown Interview
JOHNNY ORLANDO JR. throws up an interview with THROWDOWN
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Johnny Orlando Jr.'s Antibiotic Resistant Metal Show featuring an interview with Bjorn "Speed" Strid and Dirk Verbeuren of Soilwork. Recorded at the Logan Square Auditorium, Chicago IL on the early 2008 Scum Of The Earth Tour with Throwdown. Credit correction! Camera by Wojciech Kielar, Location Sound Recording/Mixing by Ben Stockton.
Soilwork Interview
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Robb Flynn faces his demons and Phil Demmel won't fake it, even for a grammy. Recorded at the Pearl Room in Mokena, IL on the early 2008 More Balls More Volume More Strength tour with Hellyeah, Nonpoint and Bury Your Dead.
Machine Head interview
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An exciting development here in Antibiotic Resistant land. Keep your faces well lubricated: we'll be showing up to blow them off your skulls at the nascent juggernaut of NONELOUDER.COM, right alongside editors Iann Robinson, Scott Ian, Otep, and Sirius Radio's Jose Mangin. I'm warning you: don't point any magnets at Nonelouder - the flying metal will decapitate you. Coming up next week is my interview with Robb and Phil from MACHINE FUCKING HEAD.
How much louder can it be? None. None more louder.
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An interview with Tom Maxwell and Bobzilla of metal supergroup Hellyeah. Recorded at the Pearl Room in Mokena, IL on their early 2008 More Balls More Volume More Strength tour with Machine Head, Nonpoint and Bury Your Dead. Check it out!
Hellyeah Interview
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DC Gunnison here, folks...I'm still a little distraught. It was really hard to get through the editing process having to watch this over and over, but I've managed to pull myself together as best I can to get this done for you...and for Johnny. This is an interview with Ted Lundström and Johan Hegg of viking death metal band Amon Amarth. Recorded at the Chicago House of Blues during their winter 2007 tour with Sonic Syndicate and Himsa.Be sure to download the Hermod's Ride to Hel script to follow along during that segment.Valhall awaits you, Johnny.
Amon Amarth Interview
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A meatballriffic interview with John Pettibone and Sammi Curr of Seattle metalcore band Himsa. Recorded at the Chicago House of Blues during their winter 2007 tour with Sonic Syndicate and Amon Amarth.
Video interview with Himsa
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An interview with Mauser of Polish death metal band Vader. Recorded at the Chicago stop of the Death by Decibels tour at the Logan Square Auditorium. NOTE: Vader's myspace page is actually http://myspace.com/vaderpanzer - the one we have at the end of the video is a fan page. You might also want to check out http://vader.pl to get your Vader straight from the source.
Video interview with Vader
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I'll break from the usual multimedia extravaganza to let you know that Macabre's Holiday of Horrors at the Pearl Room (a sweet venue unfortunately-for-me located in Mokena, where God left his shoes) with Divorced, Thorn Fetish and Whorrid was a killer show, and the first one in a while that I got to enjoy as a fan as opposed to running around with my video crew.Divorced seemed bored, which rubbed off on me and gave me plenty of time to ponder which Macabre shirt I was going to buy. Thorn Fetish was tight and had a good image/schtick. I thought they were great, but they seemed a bit hair metal for the bill. Whorrid was fantastic, and obviously someone in the band works in a metal shop, because they've got all sorts of really dangerous looking brushed metal logos all over everything. Whorrid, if you're reading this, please keep in mind that someone in the band could easily slip and impale himself on that spiky logo mounted to the front of the drumset...which would make for an awesome show. Goes without saying that Macabre was mindblowing. They'll be kicking ass as long as there are new serial killers to write songs about. They're clever, brutal and talented, and they have the best fastest drummer in metal, period, hands down.
Macabre's Holiday of Horrors South
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My new buddy East Coast Brian wins our copy of Himsa's Summon In Thunder autographed by John Pettibone and Sammi Curr. He was the first person to correctly guess "Lamb of God" as the #1 band. Nice job dude.
East Coast Brian wins the autographed Himsa CD.