All posts by KJ

RICK HUGHES – Redemption Interview

photo – Dominic Gouin

Canadian singer and songwriter RICK HUGHES has a new solo album out (October 24) called Redemption. Rick is also the singer for Canadian heavy metal band SWORD. Sword released 2 albums in the 80s on Canadian label Aquarius, and went on to tour supporting Alice Cooper and others (I must’ve seen them in Toronto on the Raise Your Fist and Yell tour in Toronto). Since then Rick went on to front SAINTS & SINNERS, and release a few solo albums. Now Rick is back with an excellent new solo album, with great songs, including a few covers, and some very special guests. Redemption can be ordered at: https://www.dekoentertainment.com/inthesquare/rick-hughes

Below, Rick and I talked about his new album, plus Sword, as well as his influences, and favorite artists. …..

With the first single, “The Real Me”, you had a lot of guests on it and that, so I’m wondering from where you’re based, how you got all those guys involved? What the connection is with Brad Gillis and Tommy Aldridge and that?

That’s a connection that comes from my Saints & Sinners days. With Saints & Sinners, I was working with the keyboardist from San Francisco, Jesse Bradman, a good friend of mine. When we started to get the project for my new album, that was like two years ago, we went about asking for songs. We asked Jesse if he had some songs to propose for my new album. And he says, “Yeah, I got a couple of songs that I wrote with Brad Gillis”. So, we said, Oh, we want to hear that song. Upon hearing the songs, I fell in love with the songs. I says, can I please have them? They say, Yeah, of course! That’s how we got Brad Gillis, because he accepted to let me record the song. And then we became friends. So, when it was time to record “The Real Me”, we said, well, we have Brad for his songs, because he plays on his songs, of course. And lucky for us. So, we said, “Can you do another one?” And we asked him to play on “The Real Me”.  And that’s when the idea came about to reunite him with Rudy (Sarzo) and Tommy Aldridge.

That’s interesting, because when I saw that, obviously, like, I was a big Speak Of The Devil fan when that album came out with that Ozzy lineup.

So Was I !

I’m curious how you got to where you are now with this new album Redemption, because I’ve recently picked up a couple of the Sword albums. So obviously, it’s a very different sound. You got a lot more variety on the on your new album that.  Can you talk a bit about how you are where you’re at now, as opposed to just doing the Sword stuff or kind of more of the metal stuff?

That’s a very good question. And the answer is quite logical, is that when I’m a metal singer, or I chose to record metal, I do it with Sword If it’s a solo project, like here in Quebec, I’ve been doing 50 to 100 shows a year for the last 20 years. And the shows that I do are for seven years old to 77 years old people, you know. I’m the kind of guy that when I wake up in the morning, if I listen to music, I listen to The Band, Elton John, metal stuff.  Later on in the afternoon, if I have to go around and do other stuff, listen to blues, hard rock… When I ride my Harley, sometimes I listen to heavy metal. But I’m a fan of music. My biggest influence is Robert Plant.  So, if you take Robert Plant’s career, I’m not trying to mimic or duplicate, but when your mentor does stuff, you kind of go that way without even noticing it. When you think about Robert Plant, since Zeppelin and today, it’s totally different. He’s never redone the same album.  It’s always been different. So that’s what I try to do with my solo career, I do what people already know me for.  I’m a singer and I love rock music. So, rock music’s got plenty of genre – it’s got heavy metal, it’s got hard rock, it’s got blues rock, it’s got heavy blues, it’s got pop rock, it’s got rock, it’s got country rock. So that’s the sound you hear on my album, just what I just described.

Now you do have a few covers on the album, in particular, “The Real Me”. I love the Who albums. I’m kind of curious why you picked that one of all the Who stuff.

Because of the playing.  When my manager and I decided on this song, we said, “Okay, let’s redo The Real Me, and let’s find the perfect musicians to render the song. So, it was magical because that was way before Brad was even in the conversation. So once Brad got in on the song, then we went for Tommy Aldridge and Rudy Sarzo, with the result that we hear on the recording.

There’s a few other covers, you do the Michel Pagliaro song. I imagine he’s a big influence on you. We don’t see him much outside of Quebec, I assume, but the albums are pretty easily to find here. But I wonder if you can talk a bit about that track that you chose.

Again, a very good question and I’ll answer it by answering two questions because probably you’ve got another question around the corner. Michel Pagliaro, we affectionately call him ‘Pag’, is one of my main influences. As a kid, when I first saw him on TV, that’s when I fell in love with the guy, with the attitude, the music, the sound. Pag is like the rock and roll attitude, man; this guy is amazing. And when it was time to choose the songs, I said to the producer, John Webster, and my manager, I told them, “We need at least a couple of French songs on the album”.  And they obviously asked me, “Why is it so important?”  I said, “Because I’m a loyal guy. I’ve been playing here in Quebec for 10 years. I’ve been doing 50 to 100 shows a year, there’s some French material in the show. There’s obviously a lot of English material because I’m more at ease singing Americana kind of stuff, or even British stuff. But still, there’s a section in my show that that’s Francophone for my Francophone fans.  So, I said to my producer, I said, “Listen, John, you’re the best producer in the world in my book. I’m about to do one of my most important albums. There’s got to be a couple of songs in French”.  I’m a loyal guy. I don’t want to leave my French speaking fans out of this album that is so important. And the way I closed the deal I said to him, I said, “It doesn’t matter if it’s French or English at the end of the day, because just think about Rammstein, they’re German, they sing in German, everybody loves it. You wouldn’t change German to English because of the way it sounds. So same goes with my French song on the album.  I’m sure that the English-speaking fan will find something interesting in the French song or they’ll catch a glimpse of the words. And yeah, I’m confident they’ll like it as much as they’ll like the English song.

It’s interesting because I think Michel Pagliaro did the same thing where he had some French and some English songs on various albums and that. Correct?

True. Yes. A lot of artists here in Quebec do that, they mix both, because as you can hear, I’m a French speaking guy. Rick Hughes is my real name. It’s not a stage name. My father was from Irish descent. So, it is my real name. But I’ve grown in a French environment. My girlfriend is French, my dogs, my kids, everybody around my neighbors. I speak French 24 7. So that’s it. But like I said earlier, I love the sound of singing a song in English.

The other cover, I wouldn’t say it’s cover. Actually, it’s your song, the Aldo Nova track “Someday”. I listened to that. I thought I know that because I got that here (held up Blood On The Bricks CD).  Obviously, that song is good 30 plus years old. You’ve done a lot of work with Aldo as well, that song and some other stuff as well.

This is such an important song for me. And I’ll tell you why. I wrote the song while I was working with Aldo on Saints & Sinners album. Aldo was producing the Saints & Sinners album while Jon Bon Jovi was producing his album, Blood on the Bricks for Aldo. So, while he was producing Saints & Sinners, he had written some amazing songs for the album. And so one night I came to him and I showed him “Someday” and he says, “Wow!” I said, “Cool, you like it? So, it’s going to be on the album?” He says, “No… let me ask Jon because we’re looking for a ballad right now. We’re missing a ballad. And if you would allow me to use your ballad on my album, I’d be very grateful.” I says, “…if Jon likes it, then it’s yours!  I got plenty of good songs on Saints and Sinners. And again, you wrote some excellent songs for me. So, it would be just a show of gratitude to leave you the song.”  So, the next day he called me and says, “Jon loves it. We’re going to use it for my album”. A couple of months after that, they gave me a call, they were in studio and they were rearranging the song, changing some lyrics, adding some parts here and there. So that’s how Aldo and Jon are credited on the song.  But I am the main songwriter of the song. So, I wanted to redo it. But I waited to make sure that it was okay with Aldo.

Well, it’s a great inclusion. It was a hit and it’s something obviously people will be familiar with.

And what I meant by this song is very important is that, like you said, that’s 30-something years ago that Aldo recorded that song. At that time, I was a young, struggling artist from Quebec. I had two kids that were just born. My wife, at that time and I wanted to buy a house, but we needed the down payment for a house. And we were, you know, scratching and putting some money aside and getting ready to buy a house.  It would have taken us a long time. And by leaving that song to Aldo, the first royalty check that I got was the down payment for the first house I bought. So, it’s a gift that keeps on giving.

Well that works out then…The other person you have on here I see a lot lately, he’s on the new Alice Cooper album as well, is Robbie Krieger (on “Dans La Peau“) . How did you wind up with him on the album? 

The album was recorded at Little Mountain Studio in Vancouver where Aerosmith, Bon Jovi, name it, they all recorded there. Now it’s called Iposonic Sound, but it’s the same. Nothing has changed. Frames on the wall, everything’s the same. So, everything was recorded there. It’s a live album.  We got the rhythm section to record all the songs there. So, it’s a live album. But when it was time to record my duet with Amy Keys, a fabulous female singer.  Man, I’m a big fan of hers. She was available but only in Los Angeles. So, they gave me a call.

They said, “Okay, Amy wants to do the duet with you, but it’s going to have to be in L.A. I said, “okay, so let’s do it in L.A”….”Okay, well there’s a studio in L.A. It’s Robbie Krieger’s studio, and it’s near where she lives. They got the equipment”, I said, “Wait, wait, wait! … you had me at Robbie Krieger”. I’m a big, big, big Doors fan. We went to Robbie Krieger’s studio to record Amy Keys. And while she was there recording the song, I came up with the idea.  I told my manager, I said, “Why don’t we ask Robbie to play on that song?” It’s a kind of bluesy country-ish kind of song. And he goes, “that’s a long shot”. I said, yeah, but if we don’t try it, we’ll never know.  So, we tried and he said yes. And that to me is like, it’s not even a dream come true because I never even dreamt that Robbie Krieger would play on one of my albums. I’m very, very grateful to him.

Well, yeah, it’s an interesting inclusion. He seems to do a few guest appearances; he’s on the new Alice Cooper album and he’s on an album by Blue Coop, which is the BOC guys and that. And the other guy you’ve mentioned on this album, I’m not familiar with him, is Johnny Hallyday.

Oh, Johnny Hallyday! I’m a fan of this guy. He’s like the French (from France), Elvis Presley. He died in 2017. And he was filling stadiums back in France, like 80,000 people.

He was a big, big, star, big, big influence on me as a kid, because my mom was a big fan of Elvis and of him. My mom was an artist, you know!? The Johnny Hallyday song is not known. It was kept quiet. It was released and they took it out. But before they took it out, I had a copy of it that I had put on a CD that time when we could burn CDs. So, I was listening to the song all the time and I kept it private, I didn’t want anybody to steal that idea because I thought it was such a good song. It’s like a hard rock, heavy blues kind of song. And the subject matter is so, so, SO, up to date.

How did you get a hold of it? It was an outtake from an album?

Well, you know, when I mentioned Amy Keys; Amy Keys was one of his backup singers for many years. So, he would do duets with her. The guy that wrote the song, the duet with Amy Keys, wrote the song for Amy Keys and Johnny Halliday, but Johnny died. He never could even listen to the song or let alone record it.  So, it fell into my lap. That’s when I said, “Yeah, I’m a big Johnny fan. That was meant for Johnny, I want that song!”  That’s how the connection was made.

You mentioned this album being a very important album. I get the impression in like reading some of the notes that it’s quite, some of the songs are quite personal for you. So, I wonder if you can talk a bit about the importance of everything as an album and some of the songs as being personal to you.

Just the title, you know, I was looking for a word that was the same word in French than in English, so not to deny my French root. And a couple of words came to mind, and then I came up with, Redemption, came into my head. Because I’ve been around the block a couple of times.

I’ve toured with Motorhead in the UK. I’ve been here, there, everywhere. I say that very humbly.  I had my shares of let down and get up again and fight more – that’s the story of my life. And my philosophy about that is that we’re in a constant state of redemption if we strive to get better every day as a human being. So, if you look up redemption, not in a biblical sense, but in the literal sense, it’s about focusing on yourself, not on others or what happens around the world. It’s just focusing on you and how you can make your world better. And the best way to do that is to forgive yourself all the time for everything that you do.  If you’ve done something wrong, or that was not quite right, just forgive yourself and just readjust. That to me is redemption. I thought the title was perfect because of my age, where I’m at in my life right now, the importance of that album, and all the subject matters on the album.  They’re not that serious; they’re not pointing fingers at anybody. I wanted to create an album where if somebody digs it, well, while he listens to it, he forgets about the world, he forgets about anything, he just thinks about himself and how he feels upon listening to the album. That’s why there’s so much difference between one song to the other, so people can travel in their mind, and not always stay on the same train.

What else do you have planned for promoting this? Will you be doing any shows outside of Quebec? Anything planned as far as a band goes or anything?

That’s the main reason why I did the album, is to get more shows going. I really, I truly come alive on stage. That’s my second favorite place in the world. My first favorite place in the world is here at home with my wife and my people. My second favorite place is on stage.

As soon as I put one foot on the stage, “Whoa!”, something happens. And it’s been like that since the beginning; and it’s still like that.  So, yeah, the reason for this album is to get us more shows, you know, abroad, not only in Quebec. I would love to go play in Niagara. I’ve been there before.

Growing up where you did, obviously, there’s a lot of Montreal, Quebec has kind of its own scene. There’s a lot of stuff that we don’t see much out of over here. But there’s a lot of great bands from Quebec, like Frank Marino, Pagliaro, Offenbach.

April Wine! They were based out of Quebec.

I’m a big April Wine fan.

What kind of stuff you grew up on and what some of your favorites as far as the Canadian scene went.

When we’re young, we get influenced by the music our parents listen to, as long as they listen to something cool. My parents were really cool. My father was a guitar player, singer, leader in a rock band, and my mom would sing in the band with him, a bit Johnny Cash- June Carter kind of stuff. They had this amazing vinyl collection when I was a kid. They had Zeppelin, Janis, French stuff, lots of Elvis. So, it was very rock and roll. So, my early influences were Led Zeppelin, Janis Joplin, Pink Floyd, some French stuff like Offenbach, Pagliaro. But yeah, it starts at home, or with your friends. In my case, it started at home. We’re a musical family. Everybody does music in my family. My sister sings on the album with me. My brother plays drums in Sword.

Did you keep a big record collection growing up?

Yes, I still have my vinyl collection, and I still have some old record players, like we used to have when we were kids, with the cabinets there. I got two, and I play my records on that. I got one in this room and I got one in my ‘man cave’.

The SWORD albums, which I recently picked up, the Unidisc reissues. You guys were on Aquarius, and I think Aquarius closed up at some point in the early 90s. Did you guys have any say in these reissues?

No, it’s Unidisc that handles that, but we had a good relationship with Unidisc. George, the owner of Unidisc, is a great guy.  He’s taken good care of Sword’s albums. As you can see, the reissues are beautiful. The way he redid the sleeves and everything.  It’s really good. Are you aware that we recorded a third album!?

Yeah, I was looking at that, and I see there was a limited amount of vinyl for that. I was just looking at trying to find a copy.

It’s just called Sword III.

Yeah, and then there was the live album as well?

Yeah, the live album was (done) before, but Sword III  was released in 2023, a couple of years ago. We love that album too. It sounds great. By the way, I’m rehearsing with Sword tonight. I’ve been rehearsing for the past five weeks because we’ve got some shows coming. We’re friends since we were 15 years old. We’ve always been together.

You guys must have had some success. You had a lot of names on the albums. You had Gary Moffet, you had Jack Richardson producing the one album and that.  So, what are some of the highlights of those first two albums, that period there?

Well, it was the best of times. My brother and I started to make music like we were 13.  I was 13, he was 14. I played the guitar and he was banging on stuff. And then he got drums, I got an electric guitar. Then we met the two Mikes – Mike Plant and Mike Larock. We were living in the same town. So, we were 16, 17 years old. We did the bar circuits for years and years. And we built up a fan base. In 1986 we signed with Aquarius. We released Metallized, and the next thing you know, we’re opening for Metallica! And then we got a call from the UK to go open for Motorhead. We got back, we did the second album, and then we went on tour with Alice Cooper.

That was a dream come true because my brother and I, when we were in our teens, we were the guys that would go in line at the A&M record store and wait till the door opened to buy the new Alice Cooper album, Welcome to My Nightmare and all that stuff. We were big fans of Alice Cooper. So, we got to open for him like 10, 15 years after being big fans, and get to meet him! We were so in awe. And you mentioned Jack Richardson, who worked on some Alice Cooper albums; and that (again) was another dream come true.

The other guy who recorded one of your albums was Gary Moffet, an amazing guitar player.

Yes. And amazing songwriter.

Have you seen the new version of April Wine at all?

Yes, I saw that. And the singer is a good friend of mine – Marc Parent. I played with him a couple of times. We had a show together. He’s good, he’s got a good voice, and he’s a good Good guitar player!

What else do you have on the go?

That’s it. I’m very happy with the team I have on this album. I’m really looking forward for the world to hear it because I know that with Sword and with Saints & Sinners I’ve got some fans here and around the world. So, they’ll discover a new sound, which is who I am today, what I listen to, what turns me on, what gives me the shivers, what makes me think. It’s like a good movie – if you sit down and watch a good movie, for a couple of hours you get inspired because of the message, well, the same goes for music. That’s what it does to me. If I put on a good album, I won’t stop in the middle I’ll listen from beginning to end because I know it will take me somewhere else in my head and my thoughts. You travel without leaving home! Just sitting down. Like when we were kids, and we got Pink Floyd The Wall, how that changed our lives. I remember as a kid listening to The Wall and crying on some songs because I thought ‘wow, this is so beautiful!’ And it changed my life, a little bit. And then I heard another album that changed my life a little bit. Music does that to you.

A good songwriter will not only work on the music, but also on the lyrics to make sure that what he says reflects what he thinks, and what he thinks is right. And again, a good songwriter will do that. There’s songs that I’ve heard 20-50 times and they still do the same thing to me. They make me want to be a better person. Music does that to you. People take it for granted, but music is like food for thought; it’s food for your soul.

Is there any plans for another Sword album?

Yeah, probably. I’m doing some rehearsals with Sword because we got some shows coming up, but I’m really focused on my solo project. I just can’t wait for the album to get out, and to start to tour for that album. When I’m done with that, the timing is right, then it’s going to be Sword.

You mentioned a few of your influences. What are a few of your favorite albums of all time; albums that have stuck with you, that you can put on anytime?

 Of all-time, I’d say Led Zeppelin I, II, III, and IV. Every Black Sabbath with Ozzy, with Dio, and Born Again with Ian Gillan… Those are my favorites – Dio, Ozzy, Robert Plant, some Judas Priest. Those are my favorite singers, biggest influences.

LINKS:

http://www.rickhughes.ca

https://www.facebook.com/RickHughesOfficiel

swordmetalized.com

ROB MORATTI – to release new solo album

Canadian singer Ron Moratti will have a new solo album, Sovereign, out December 12, on Frontiers. There’s a new single out now. The album features Joel Hoekstra (!) on lead guitar, among the players. *Check out the video below, as well as the bio, track-list, and links at the bottom.

Talking about the new track, Rob stated: “It is the perfect opener. Most of us have struggled with relationships and this song is packed with the most powerful positive energy, you can feel it! We are all here for each other to lean on and help you win again. We hurt and we heal. We learn from our mistakes. Just don’t give up on love”.

Rob Moratti is a solo artist, formerly lead vocalist of Moratti, Final Frontier and of course Saga. Rob Moratti, a genuine and true original, has an astonishing range and has carved a unique style for himself, blending the finest elements of melodic and progressive rock. 

“Sovereign” is Rob Moratti’s sixth solo album on the heels of the critically acclaimed release “Epical”, his debut on the Frontiers label. Filled with his trademark harmonies and memorable choruses, the songs on ” Sovereign” develop from where “Epical” has left off and are easily some of the most exciting that he has ever put his stamp on. An absolute must for fans of classic AOR music in line with The Storm, Journey, Survivor, Strangeways and Signal.

The album once features a stellar cast of contributing writers and performers, including Joel Hoekstra (Whitesnake, ex-Night Ranger) on lead guitar, Tony Franklin (ex-The Firm, Blue Murder) on bass, Felix Borg on drums (and co-writing), Fredrik Bergh on keys (and co-writing) and Pete Alpenborg (who also contributes rhythm guitar and keyboards). A real all-star line up for this excellent album!

Moratti started his professional singing career in the early 90’s as lead vocalist and songwriter of the band Moratti. They were immediately well received, garnering airplay in Japan and Europe. In 2002, Rob’s future went forward with Final Frontier, a band with whom he has released four incredible melodic-minded metal albums. 

Over the years, despite all the changes in the music scene, Rob’s perseverance and passion have stayed strong. His talent captured the attention of the multi-platinum selling legendary progressive rock band SAGA and in 2008, Rob Moratti would become the new vocalist for the band for a while, appearing on 2009’s “The Human Condition”. 

Over the course of his solo career, Rob has also worked with many incredible musicians like Joel Hoekstra (Whitesnake, TSO, ex-Night Ranger), Reb Beach (Whitesnake. Winger), Tony Franklin (ex- Blue Murder, The Firm), Brian Doerner (Saga), Ian Crichton (Saga), and Steve Augeri (ex-Journey).

Pre-Order “Sovereign” HERE

Tracklist:

1.    Don’t Give Up On Love    
2.    Can’t Let You Go    
3.    Every Word    
4.    Waiting    
5.    Locked Down    
6.    Two Hearts    
7.    In The Air Tonight    
8.    I’ll Never Break Your Heart    
9.    The Calling    
10.    Angel    
11.    This Is Forever

Line Up:
Rob Moratti – vocals
Joel Hoekstra – lead guitar
Tony Franklin – bass
Felix Borg – drums 
Fredrik Bergh – keyboards
Pete Alpenborg – rhythm guitar and keyboards

LINKS:

Facebook
Instagram
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Website

CREATURES – Brazilian metal band to release 2nd album

CREATURES is an ’80s influenced hard-rock / heavy metal band from Brazil, who are about to release their second album. Their sound, riffs, vocals….reminds me first of early-mid ’80s Judas Priest, among others of the era. *Check out the press info below, as well as the 2 videos from their forthcoming album Creatures II, which will be out November 14, on High Roller Records.

Creatures were originally formed in the summer of 2019 in the city of Curitiba. Like most places in Brazil, the scene there is dominated by extreme metal. However, there are some small “pockets of resistance” carrying the torch for more of a traditional heavy metal sound. And Creatures (along with a group called Trovão) is one of the most talented of the lot.

After having issued a few singles, Bart Gabriel offered the band a deal to release their debut album from 2021 through his former label, Iron Oxide Records.

The follow-up “Creatures II” is now due to be released on High Roller Records.  “Creatures II”  was recorded between September 2024 and March 2025 at Heavy Tron Studio, by Arthur Migotto (Hazy Hamlet). It was produced by Mateus Cantaleano and Migotto. Mateus Cantaleano wrote all the music and lyrics. The line-up on the recording was Marc Brito (vocals), Mateus Cantaleano (guitar), Ricke Nunes (bass), and Sidnei Dubiella (drums). There were also a few special guests, like Caio Vidal on keyboards and Arthur Migotto himself doing some additional vocals.

“Musically, I’d say the album is literally a mix of heavy metal and hard rock, with a darker, more evil vibe,” explains guitarist Mateus Cantaleano. “It carries what I believe is the essence of the band – dynamic songs that combine riffs with arpeggios, catchy choruses with darker minor melodies. Something like that, I think.”

Creatures were once described as a mixture of Dokken, Ratt and Judas Priest, a description Mateus Cantaleano can live with: “Absolutely, that’s true. Those bands – especially Dokken and Judas Priest – are very important in my life, and I carry their influence, even indirectly, in almost everything I do. Of course, I always aim for inspiration, not copying either of them exactly.”

Comparing “Creatures I” and “Creatures II”, the guitar player continues: “I’d say “Creatures II” is a bit heavier, darker, and a more mature album than its predecessor. While the first album was recorded just by me and Roberto, this time we had a full band involved. Both albums share the same essence – very dynamic songs, heavy tracks, power ballads, lots of vocal harmonies, catchy choruses, wild guitar solos, and so on. To me, ‘Beware The Creatures’ is the track that best sums up what I’m aiming for musically with Creatures.” 

LINKS:

https://www.facebook.com/creaturesheavymetal
https://www.instagram.com/creaturesheavymetal
https://creaturesheavymetal.bandcamp.com/
https://www.hrrecords.de/
https://highrollerrecords.bandcamp.com/

Collector’s Story – with Uriah Heep fan Boris Shnitzer

My friend Boris Shnitzer from Israel has been a lifelong Uriah Heep fan. What is most interesting about Boris’ huge Heep collection is his focus on collecting variants of his favorite Heep album – Salisbury (the band’s second album, from 1971). It’s Boris’ Salisbury collection that got me wondering how one gets in to such an extreme collection of one album. Heck, I know many Heep fans have multiples of various favorites, and I people who know think I’m ridiculous having about 20+ copies of Demons And Wizards, but clearly I am small-time! Boris discusses his Heep and specifically, his Salisbury collection below. And in his latest emails, Boris has since gained 2 more unique vinyl copies of Salisbury!

How and why did you start collecting Salisbury variants? 

I had this idea to frame the Live 73 inserts to put on a wall. So, I bought a few copies of the album, and I basically figured out that there are different releases. Before that I had all Heep albums, but one copy was good enough for me😉 So I started to buy some other copies of Heep albums, and got infected by the collecting virus. For several years I bought all things Heep, vinyls, various compilations, CDs, cassettes, posters, whatever. At some point I saw I don’t have too many copies of Salisbury, and since it is my favorite album, I decided to concentrate on it. The idea was not to have as many as possible copies, but as many as possible different releases, noy only vinyl, but also CDs, cassettes, 8-tracks,7-in. I would ask sellers to provide info on the albums, so I can figure out if it’s something I don’t have already.

Why (presumably) is this your favorite Heep album? and is it the only one you collect to this extreme? 

Salisbury is my favorite Heep album because it was the first Heep album I bought when I was 16, and it made me a Heep fan. Something on that album hooked me on the first listen. I even started to learn English more seriously because I wanted to understand the lyrics.

It is the only one I collect to this extreme, thou I do have 20-25 copies of some other Heep albums, practically at least several copies of each album.

How many copies do you have (LP, CD, cassette, 8-track, reel to reel?)? 

148 different copies on LPs (various countries, various years, various labels, etc.). 25 copies on CD, 24 cassettes, 6 8-tracks, 18 7in singles.

As far as I know Salisbury was not released on reel to reel. I think only Live 73 and Sweet Freedom were released on RtR. I have the Live 73 one, but never came across the SF.

Can you pick a favorite copy of the album from your collection (either for $ value or for personal reason) ? 

I don’t really look at it from a favorite point of view. I would say the favorite copy is the first one I bought, an Israeli pressing from 1973, which made me a Heep fan.

What is the rarest copy of Salisbury you have? 

I don’t know. Not sure what might be considered as a rarest one. Maybe the Vertigo mono pressing from Colombia. Probably the rarest are the ones I don’t have😉

Is there many more variants (in all formats you’re still looking for)? and is there a ‘holy grail’ copy of Salisbury that you still would like to find?

I wish I knew for sure. I suspect there are some more, like Yugoslavian or Turkish, other Heep albums were released in those countries, but I never encountered a Salisbury. Maybe more from South America.

A holy grail? I don’t look at collecting so zealously😉 Maybe the 17inch metal master, I saw it once, but wasn’t able to buy it. I guess it’s a lost cause😉

* Thanks to Boris for his replies, photos, And the Heep LPs from Israel I received a few months back, great additions to my collection.

Tim Durling – new book reviews FLEETWOOD MAC catalogue.

Canadian rock writer Tim Durling has a brand new book available . A Beginner’s Companion to FLEETWOOD MAC. Durling looks over and reviews the band’s entire catalogue, which dates back to the late 60s, long before Stevie Nicks and Lindsay Buckingham arrived for the most successful period of the from mid to late 70s. Says Tim – “I tried to cover every original Fleetwood Mac song, which was really confusing in the 1967-69 period but I think I managed it… The idea behind this book is to help the curious new listeners navigate the catalogue.”

The book also includes a list of 100 Fleetwood Mac covers by 100 different artists, as well as a forward by Pete Pardo, and a cool cover drawing by Sally Ann Morgan.

Available in paperback, totaling 151 pages, and available on Amazon for a mere $21 (Canadian) now

LISTEN CAREFULLY TO THE SOUND.

Fleetwood Mac: a band with several distinct lives. The hard driving blues of the Peter Green-led lineup. The dreamy soft rock that defined the Bob Welch era of the early Seventies. The turbulent but undeniably potent chemistry of the Buckingham/Nicks years. It all adds up to a confusing but ultimately rewarding catalogue of music.

But where does one begin?
The Sound That Haunts You is author Tim Durling’s attempt to direct the curious listener from the band’s late Sixties beginnings through their more recent recordings in the 21st Century.

Each of the Mac’s studio albums is analyzed and summarized.

You’ll also discover the sheer breadth of artists who were enchanted by Fleetwood Mac’s music enough to cover their songs. Featuring a foreword by Sea of Tranquility host Pete Pardo.

How does a new listener begin to find their way through such a varied and complicated catalogue? Durling provides an easy-reading road map through the band’s 1968 debut album all the way through 2003’s Say You Will, and beyond! Featuring lovely hand-drawn artwork, and photos from the author’s own collection, The Sound That Haunts You is the perfect companion to sitting by your preferred music source, listening to Fleetwood Mac.

Whether you are a longtime fan or a curious newcomer, this book is for you.

GREG T. WALKER interview: Two Wolf, Blackfoot…

GREG T WALKER is best known as a founding member of the classic Southern rock band (and highly underrated) BLACKFOOT, with whom he recorded and toured with from the 70s to mid 80s. And in the very early days he was also a part of LYNYRD SKYNYRD. When Blackfoot broke up, Greg went on to various other projects, with his most recent being a brand new album with TWO WOLF. The band’s self titled debut comes after a decade of Greg keeping the band going. If you like Southern Rock, I cannot recommend this enough. Two Wolf is a heavier rockin’ band, even to Blackfoot. The album (available on CD and now LP) even includes a few Blackfoot remakes.

I was happy to talk to Greg about Two Wolf and their new album, as well as going back to talk about his Blackfoot days. Hope you enjoy the read. It was one of my favorite interviews I’ve ever done; Greg was a pleasure to talk with, and I hope to see the band sometime up this way.

*Please check out the links at the end of the interview. I have included links to songs in the text, highlighted.

Can tell me a bit about the band, you guys have been going for a bit, haven’t you? You had an EP in 2017?

I formed Two Wolf in 2015, and Lance (Lopez) was in the original lineup. He only lasted about two months because he had some prior commitments, and then we brought Chris Bell in, and he also had some commitments. So, it was a couple years. We were just a three-piece, and then we got Chris and Lance both back in the band at the same time, and that was the magic. That’s what I wanted. So, that’s Two Wolf today.

And Lance, he co-wrote most of the stuff, and he’s quite a guitar player, and, it’s a very heavy album to what I expected, in comparison to the Blackfoot stuff.

Yeah, it’s at least as heavy as the heavy Blackfoot stuff. Lance wrote two or three of the songs; I co-wrote, as Chris Bell and myself did, you know, we all contributed to it. And we did three Blackfoot covers, as you can see. I really was hoping maybe one, two at the most, but Chris and Lance really love the Blackfoot catalog, and especially as guitar players, that guitar-driven band. So, we wound up with three, and it turned out to be a blessing.

Are those three regulars in your set list?

Yes, they are.

Can you tell me a bit about how you met Lance? I know he’s a good bit younger than the rest of you guys, I think, and he had his own gig going for a while there.

I actually met him through a drummer friend, who was the first drummer in Two Wolf, and he said, “I know this guy that’s a blistering guitar player”. So, that’s how I met Lance. It was through the drummer at the time.

How long has this album been in the works? How long have you guys been writing, and how long was the recording process?

It took about a year. We made four trips into the studio. We didn’t have a record deal, we just wanted to do an album and have it ready in case. And then we submitted it to Cleopatra, and they instantly said, “we love it”, and boom, it’s a done deal.

Can tell me a bit about the album artwork? Who did that and what kind of inspired it?

That is a girl named Sophie Armatol. She lives in France. I had met her when I was over there several times, and I saw her work, and I said, “oh, you’re just wonderful as an artist”. So, we gave her the initial concept. We definitely wanted wolves involved. She sent a bunch of sketches, and then we wound up with the one that’s on the cover now.

Can you tell me a bit about some of the songs? What stands out for you, and does everything kind of get rotated into the set list from this album?

We do every song on the new record. And some additional Blackfoot songs that are personal favorites. But you definitely will hear every song on that record, we do every single one.

Do you have any favorites of your own? Things you like doing, and things you’re kind of happiest with the way they turned out?

As in, you know, the original days, “Diary of a Working Man”. I love that song, always did, and we never played it live back in the d ay, not one single time. But we’ve been playing that song in the set for several years. So, we recorded it, and, and it came out really great. So, that’s among the favorites, but I couldn’t really pick one favorite. I love them all. We put our hearts and souls into every song, no matter who wrote it. So, we’re real happy with the way it turned out.

I like “Too Hard To Handle” and “Keep On Moving”, I think, is the single!?

“Keep On Moving”, yeah, that was one of my tracks that I always thought that was a B song. You know, it’s just a fun rocker; it wasn’t Beethoven, that’s for sure. But the guys love that song, and it actually came out real good, and that is the single.

Obviously, people want to hear some Blackfoot stuff, but you guys got your own thing, your own album. How is the response to that stuff?

It’s just going great. We got incredible reviews, response on every format, and hope I don’t jinx myself. Nobody’s said anything bad yet.

So, it’s out on CD and vinyl(?)

Vinyl comes out October 17th.

Did you guys have much stuff left over that you might already have the beginning of something new…?

Well, like I say, we’ve made four trips into the studio. We generally would do like four at a time. It’s interesting, I remember years ago, vinyl, you could have 45, 50 minutes on it, and now they say it’s like 20 minutes per side, and you can’t exceed that. I’m like, what changed!? I don’t know. That’s it. We did an album’s worth of songs, and then we got the deal, and then we started playing a lot more live, and we didn’t have a chance to go back in the studio. But we will soon, because even at the end of the original recording, we were already talking about, can’t wait to start on number two. You always want one more album.

Can you tell me a bit about some of the songs that you had a hand in writing? Was there any ideas or songs that had been sitting around for a while, for years, maybe?

“Keep On Moving” was, solely my composition. “Great Spirit” was started by a friend of mine in Montana, who I’ve known since the 70s, and he had the basic concept for that, and we joined up and finished it. “Traveler” was a song that we actually had played in the Blackfoot years, that was written by myself and our drummer Jackson (Spires). No big story there, it’s just, I had an idea, I played it, and he got on the drums, and then he helped me write the lyrics to it. And “Great Spirit”, most of the lyrics were from my friend in Montana, and I added to that, like a bridge and so forth, but I co-wrote those two, but “Keep on Moving” was one of my sole compositions. Again, I didn’t think it would ever be on the record, but I loved it.

Two Wolf, 2017 5-song EP. (cove art – Sophie Armatol)

I want to talk a little bit about some of the Blackfoot stuff as well. Do you still keep in touch with Charlie?

Yeah, I do. Charlie lives about a little over an hour from me. He lives just east of Gainesville, Florida. We stay in touch. He, oh my God, he still plays like he did years ago. His back problems have stopped him from playing live. I mean, he can stand up, maybe two or three songs, and then he’s got to sit down. It’s his spine, it’s been bothering him for years and years, but he came over here back in March, and a drummer came over. I met my drummer through Charlie, actually, and Charlie walked in and said, I want to play 10 Blackfoot songs, so we went out the studio, and I just had chill bumps listening to him play. It still sounded like the day we recorded it. He hasn’t lost anything. That guy can take a $50 guitar and a $50 amp, and he sounds like a Les Paul through a Marshall. I don’t know how he does it. It’s all in his fingers, I think.

In the beginning, you and Rickey were both briefly with Lynyrd Skynyrd, but you went off and obviously started the Blackfoot album, so how did the whole first album come about, because you guys went through a lot of changes there, and you never had a keyboard player in the beginning, either. That’s the other thing, as far as the Southern rock bands that had…

No, we didn’t. I played a couple little bitty piano parts, but you don’t really hear them on the earlier albums. But, we’d known the Skynyrd boys for a long time before we ever joined the band, in Florida. So we were friends, and Ricky joined first, and I came in three months later, I think it was, on bass, and at the time. It was going to be permanent, at least we signed a management contract and recording, but that music didn’t come out for two or three years after we originally recorded it, because we had already left the band. What I wanted to do was reform Blackfoot. I told Ricky that I just feel this urge to go back and pick up where we left off. We need to finish what we started. And, Jackson was another childhood friend from kindergarten, so, we were the nucleus, because we grew up since little bitty kids. But he agreed, so we put the band back together, and fortunately, because of our time at Muscle Shoals with Skynyrd, they said, send us a demo tape, so we did, you know, reel to reel. And they liked it enough, and they said, if you can get down to Alabama, we will record you and see if we can get you a deal. And they did. So, that was No Reservations. It came out, and…it did sell, I don’t know, 30 or 40,000 copies, maybe. And the next year we did Flyin’ High, on the Epic label. And same thing, it just came out and went at the same time. And then we went three years without a label, and then we hooked up with a guy who’s sister worked at Warner Brothers, on the Atco label, and so we recorded Strikes with a mobile unit, and signed us to a deal, and Strikes came out, and we became a 10-year overnight success. You know, it’s like a brand new band, but I said, Yeah, we’ve been together 10 years, but that went gold quickly, and then Platinum, and that set the tone for the years to follow.

Now, that was probably the band’s biggest album, I believe, right?

Yes.

I love the logo on the Flyin’ High album! What did you actually think of those first two albums? Is anything that stands out for you or that you particularly liked?

I always liked all of them. We would mutually agree on which songs to put on the record. We recorded more, and there were songs left over. I haven’t listened to that record in a long, long time. There’s some funny stuff on it, there’s some good stuff on it, anything in between.

Strikes is like an easy favorite for me. I still hear “Highway Song” on the radio from Buffalo once in a while, but you did the two covers on there, which was interesting. “I Got A Line On You” and “Wishing Well”, which I thought was a great cover. Was it your own ideas to do those covers, or was it kind of suggested?

Yeah, we had done both of those songs in our early club days. And it was just personal favorites.

Matter of fact, I think we did a third cover was “Pay My Dues”, an old Blues Image song; another personal favorite. In fact, we were in the studio warming up, and the mobile unit was out back, and we were just getting everything tuned, and we started playing that song, and the opening chord, you just hit it and let it ring, and the engineer just quickly hit the button. We didn’t know it. So we did the song, and we finished, and we said, “Okay, we’re warmed up, we’re ready to go, let’s start recording”. He said, “I think you need to come in and listen to that”. We said, “Listen to what? He said, “I just recorded your warm-up song”, and it made the album. I mean, who would have thought!?

Well, I think this album is a very consistent album for me. I really like the cover of “Wishing Well”, and obviously “Train, Train”, and “Highway Song”.

And then you did, like, these two albums, Marauder and Tomcattin’, which were both excellent albums, but they really didn’t kind of put you guys over the top.

No, they both went gold, but they didn’t have the sales that Strikes did. Tomcattin’, I love that record. That was like on steroids, so to speak. That’s a heavy record, and Europe really embraced it. They loved it over there.

You guys had a bigger following over there. Is that correct? Like, from the stuff I see in the UK press and that, from that time?

Yeah. I mean, there were periods that we may have done better over there, as opposed to over here, that we played here a lot more, of course. But we did a lot of tours over there. We did all the big festivals, you know, Reading and Donington, Monsters of Rock. And, we were playing with Deep Purple and ACDC, and we got to be friends that led to later tours over here. We played with AC/DC, a tour with Bon Scott. And then when Brian came in after Bon passed away, we did another tour with AC/DC. I love those guys. They still do what they do, and they do it great.

Now, this album (hold up Highway Song Live), I don’t think this one got released over here, the live album.

I think they released like 10,000 copies is all, which really upset us because it was a political thing going on with the Atco label in England, in London; a personal vendetta that I won’t go into. But they sent 10,000 copies over. That album would have sold great had it been released, and at the numbers that the others had, because everybody loved live albums at that time. That’s a blistering album.

I have the King Biscuit Flower Hour one that came out years ago. I think that’s from ’84. And I have this (I hold up the 4-CD Gimme Gimme Gimme set), it’s a bootleg, but it’s got all the radio shows gathered on this.

Oh yeah. I don’t remember what’s on that, but yeah, I’ve got a copy of it.

It’s all gathered radio shows that you guys did over the years.

And some of the bootlegs, they look legitimate, but they’re really bootlegs.

So what changed as far as, you know, did you guys think you need to bring in a keyboard player or was it kind of the record company thought you needed one?

I think it was more from the record company at that time hair bands were gaining popularity. They started kind of taking over and it’s like, “You guys need to get with the modern era, change your hairstyle, change your stage clothing”. And I said, “We’re not going to wear a spandex. I can tell you.” (haha).. that was just not in our DNA. But yeah, it was grabbing at straws from the record company. And in the end, by the time we got to Vertical Smiles, that was a kiss of death, and we couldn’t do anything right in their opinion. So the album came out and just went to the bottom.

Did you initially think it was a good idea or do you think it was a bad idea from the start?

I know Jackson and I were not really in favor of a keyboard player, because we were a guitar driven band. But, you kind of get backed against the wall and it’s either “you got to do something or we’re not going to give you support”, you know, the record company. So we called John Lord and he said, “If you’d have called me two weeks ago, I would have been on the next plane to America…I just signed on with a new band called Whitesnake”. So then we got in touch with Ken Hensley and then he’s the one that came in. Ken was a brilliant musician, a hell of a cat to hang out with, very, very talented guy, played really great slide guitar, which I didn’t know until he joined the band. I said “My favorite Uriah Heep album was that one with the mirror on the front”. He said, “Look At Yourself” – “Man, that guitar playing is brilliant”. He goes, “Oh, thank you”. And I said, “What do you mean, thank you? He said, “That was me”. I said, “You played slide?” He said, “Every song that had slide, that was me”. So he turned out to be a real talent. He was a great vocalist, player. Yeah, he’s got the package. But he didn’t stay until the end. He left. You know, the band eventually broke up.

Have you ever heard the album Toe Fat, that he did?

Yes.

And then there’s an album called Weed. So, he did a lot of interesting stuff outside of Uriah Heep that was all guitar stuff.

He did.

So now Siogo is one I really liked. I get that it steers away from the Southern rock sound, but it still has a lot of great commercial rock songs. “Teenage Idol” was good, but, kind of probably lyrically timely, for that era. “Heart’s Grown Cold”, “Crossfire” and the one that Ken brought in, “Send Me An Angel“. The one I really like is the track “Sail Away”. Do you remember that one?

Yeah.

Do you recall who came up with that (Sail Away), like the riff and how that song came about?

I kind of think that was Kenny’s original idea, that we built on… I think, I’m pretty sure.

Yeah, because I think it’s co-credited to a few of you guys on the album.

That’s when MTV really took hold of the business. Everybody was forced to do videos. So the hair-bands, they were younger and they adapted very well, but for us it looked cheesy. I mean, I look at those videos today and I just laugh. I’m like, Oh, my God! We’re musicians, not actors.

That video of “Teenage Idol” with Rickey just walking along, meeting people, and you guys didn’t come in til the end. (lol…Greg shakes head). But, I thought this was a great album.

And then, obviously you had this (Vertical Smiles), which kind of turned out to be a disaster. Did you guys get a lot of grief for the cover? (I hold up cover)

(laughs) I don’t remember now, it’s been so many years, why we came up with that cover. It was mostly our snapshots. And I know that the female part of Atco Records at the time when they saw that cover, oh, it made them so mad. They were like, “You male chauvinist pigs!” We were like, “it’s just an album cover”. Of course, the title, if you don’t figure it out, I guess you still live in a cave. but they got it. And…Yeah, that was the kiss of death.

And there was obviously a story behind the title for that one as well (Siogo).

Yeah, we won’t go into that. Our road crew came up with with that, and it was on their bus. They had a big cardboard thing in the front lounge of the bus that said S.I.O.G.O., but for each letter, there was a word below it. We laughed at it at the time, and it wound up being an album name. So Ricky was doing an interview one time and asking what it stood for. And he just didn’t even think he just spit it out. And why!? Oh, my God. You know, you couldn’t edit back then like you can now. But it is what it is.

I watched a clip from on YouTube this morning was a little video of you guys interviewed, all in the studio with Eddie Offord. It was MTV. It was like a three or four minute interview, and Ricky did most of the talking…So Charlie was there in the studio while you guys were doing Vertical Smiles. And he left at some point during that.

Yeah. Before it was finished he left. He was just kind of tired of the game, the politics. So, you know, Kenny was in the band and because Kenny played guitar, he couldn’t duplicate what Charlie did, of course, but he was good enough that we pulled it off. And it worked great. And then when Kenny left, we got Bobby Barth in the band from Axe. Bobby lives about four miles down the road from me now. So, you know, we had our hurdles, but we we kept going.

Now there’s some covers on this album, which I assume weren’t all your ideas, like the Peter Cetera song and stuff like that.

Yeah. See, that was that record company pressure because anything that record companies had the publishing on, they pushed out, because they had screwed the writers out of royalties, that was very common back then. We worked it up and we thought, OK, we we gave it a little bit of a harder edge, and I mean, it worked ok. We did it live. Yeah. And I don’t know if it helped or hurt, but that that whole album was different than what we had done up to that point.

I remember reading something from Rickey at the time (or shortly after) where he said there was three or four very heavy tracks that were removed. So I’m curious what you would recall of those songs and if they’ll ever surface?

They did not. The record company sent four of their top people down to the studio, Eddie Offord’s studio, which was an old movie theater. So they sat there in the front row. Eddie had these gigantic monitors, I mean, size of a bathroom. He had it cranked on 10. And those those guys and girls sat there and listened to the complete album, and they said, “Oh, my God, this this is a masterpiece…. You reinvented yourself…. It’s going to go straight to number one…It’s going to be a platinum selling record”. We’re all excited. So, we left the next day and said we’re going to take two weeks off, which we rarely ever did.

On the third day, Rickey calls and he said, “Are you sitting down?” And I said, “No”, “Sit down. I got something to tell you”. And I said, what? He goes “Atco just turned down side B”. And I said “What!? Three days ago they were raving about it”. So the people that were there went back to New York, and played it for the top brass, and they go “Oh no, we’ve got to replace side B.” So, that meant for us going back in the studio multiple times, doing 3 or 4 at a time. I’ve got a reel to reel tape here, it’s one of 2, and there’s 30-something songs on that tape, and the other’s got about the same. I can’t play it because it’s the quarter track tape, I think if I played it now it would just come apart. Nobody has those old machines anymore. So they got us going in, and at that point we were grasping at straws. We replaced side B with new material, and they finally agreed to it, and the record came out.

It’d be a shame if those tracks never came out, if there was a way they could come out. I think Rickey had mentioned 3 or 4 specific titles. After the band broke up, Rickey, obviously continued without you guys. You guys got the band back together without Rickey, after he’d joined Skynyrd. Was there anything you guys did with Bobby (Barth) during that time; that you recorded?

In the 90s, yeah Rickey had continued on and changed it to ‘Rickey Medlocke and Blackfoot’, but he was the only original member, of course, until he joined Skynyrd in ’96. In the meantime, Jackson got in to The Southern Rock All-Stars, Dave Hlubeck, and a couple of the ‘Hatchet guys in and out, and I did some shows with them, here and there. In 2004 I reformed Blackfoot with Jackson and Charlie, and that’s when we brought Bobby Barth in, on lead vocals and lead guitar. We did that for seven years; we had a great run. And then in 2011, on December 31st that ended. I said Ok, it’s time to put it to bed. But we got to resurrect it for seven years

Was it that ended mutually or was it Rickey that didn’t want it to keep going?

We had worked out an agreement for seven years, and we didn’t want to extend it, And Rickey wanted to revive it, his version, which he wound up doing, but he was not in the band, it was other players.

Yes, kind of bizarre.

Yeah, it is very bizarre. But it was a great seven years.

So, was there any recordings during that time? Did you go in the studio at all?

No. But we did a live record, for Cleopatra, actually. It was us, Molly Hatchet, and the Atlanta Rhythm Section, we, all 3 , did a full album, with video, and they released it. And that thing sold great! It was simply called ‘Blackfoot;, because we had the rights to use the name Blackfoot. And when we signed with Cleopatra this year for the record that’s coming out in a couple if weeks (the CD is already out), they said “we worked with you guys before”, and I said “you worked with me”. And Lance had worked with them too, with his solo stuff. So, that was a live record, it’s a great record, the video, the production; everything was first class.

(Dare I ask), Do you talk to Rickey at all still?

Not at all! He’s been doing his Skynyrd thing all these years. The last time I saw him was 2005, when Jackson was on a ventilator. He came to the hospital, and we caught up then, and talked, and I haven’t talked to him since. But I wish him well. I think he’s doing a great job and has had a great career with Skynyrd; I hope he stays with them another fifty years!

Is there anything, other than the Vertical Smiles tracks, that might be in the vaults, that you guys could ever discuss putting out?

We always had songs leftover, with the first record No Reservations, we always had six, seven, or eight songs leftover record after record. I don’t know where they are, or who’s got the masters. There’s probably enough for three full double sided albums worth of tracks. And it wasn’t like they’re throwaway tracks, we would do a lot of songs, and you kind of had to put all the titles in to a hat, and do like this (covers his eyes), reach in and grab a piece of paper. No real B songs at all.

Do you guys, Two Wolf ever play up this way?

We were in Syracuse a week and a half ago, at a place called ‘Sharky’s‘. It’s a big covered pavilion. It was in the 70s in the day, but when we got on by dark it had dropped to 55, so the tuning was bad (haha), the guitars were going out of tune. But it was beautiful up there; the leaves were turning, it’s was bright and sunny..

(we finish up talking of the band’s upcoming shows in North Carolina, south Florida, and I suggest that the band comes up across the border sometime, which Greg says he’d Love to!).

LINKS:

https://www.twowolfrocks.com/

https://www.facebook.com/twowolftheband

https://cleopatrarecords.bandcamp.com/album/two-wolf

https://m.facebook.com/armatolsophiegraphicdesign/

http://www.swampland.com/articles/view/title:greg_t_walker

https://100percentrock.com/2025/09/a-dirty-dozen-with-greg-t-walker-from-two-wolf-august-2025/

https://www.classicrockhistory.com/an-interview-with-greg-t-walker-lynyrd-skynyrd-blackfoot-two-wolf/

https://www.boomerocity.com/interviews/1775-lance-lopez-talks-about-being-in-two-wolf.html

ACE FREHLEY -Spaceman (2018),

ACE FREHLEY was the original and legendary guitarist, who would come across as the coolest member of KISS. His passing yesterday came as a shock to many. Though not with Kiss since 1982, save for a few reunion tours and an album (late 90s), Ace remained in the spotlight , larger than life. Not the biggest writer while in the band during it’s first decade, he did come up with classics like “Cold Gin”, “Strange Ways”, and “Shock Me”. His 1978 solo album was the best (and highest seller) of the band members 4 solo solo albums released at the same time, featuring the hit single, his version of Russ Ballard’s “New York Groove”. But when he left the band in ‘8282, Frehley proved he wasn’t done, his album’s Frehley’s Comet and Second Sighting (as Frehley’s Comet), were as good as or Better than anything the band did in that decade without him. Surely songs like “Rock Soldiers” and “Insane” would’ve been standouts in Kiss’ 80s catalogue. While not busy recording in the 90s (like many older acts), Ace got more serious in the post-2000s. and while his former band gave up recording new material after 2012, Frehley picked it up, recording 6 albums since 2009’s Anomaly, and including 2 albums of cover songs. His last album was last year’s 10 000 Volts, which featured the title track and “Walkin’ On The Moon”. Heck, I’ve yet to pick that one up.

But, going through these this morning, I am picking 2018’s Spaceman. For me, I find Spaceman to be the most solid thing Ace recorded over the past few decades. And though I was never a fan of his vocals, it’s not too bad here, and suits these songs perfectly. Favorites include “Rockin With The Boys”, “Pursuit Of Rock And Roll” and ” Without You I’m Nothing” (co-written w/ Gene Simmons). Heck, I even liked Ace’s take of the Eddie Money hit “I Wanna Go Back”. This was a really good album, full of big riffs and solos, great sounding, and there’s no skip-over cuts for me! I did get the CD and the limited picture-disc LP at the time (Record Store Day, w/ poster).

RIP Ace.

Norway’s GAZPACHO to release ‘Magic 8-Ball’

Norwegian art-rock/prog band GAZPACHO have been releasing albums since the early 2000’s, with the new album scheduled for October 31. The music is kinda lighter, experimental, atmospheric…but check out the new single “We Are Strangers”, which is a standout track here, and pretty representative of the band’s sound here. *Check out the press info below, as well as videos and links below.

Widely regarded as one of the most innovative acts in modern progressive music, Gazpacho have carved out a cult following with their unique blend of art rock and cinematic storytelling. From their critically acclaimed 2007 masterpiece Night to the hauntingly beautiful Demon (2014), the band has consistently pushed the boundaries of progressive music.
 
 They’ve toured with legends like Marillion, played to devoted audiences across Europe, and earned a reputation for crafting concept albums that challenge and move listeners in equal measure.
 
After a five-year break, Magic 8-Ball marks Gazpacho’s return with eight new tracks built around the idea of fate. How it moves without warning, and how the choices we make can slowly strip away who we thought we were. 
 
The title, Magic 8- Ball, ties into the idea of randomness and inevitability. Shaking something for answers you already suspect and repeating the cycle over and over. The idea of infinity is central. These stories repeat throughout the album. Different forms, same patterns always finding a way back.
 
 Musically, the album stays true to Gazpacho’s core. Atmospheric, layered, and emotional. But more focused. No unnecessary weight. Just eight stories told with clarity and tension. The album was mixed by Thomas Juth (a-ha/Elton John/Paul McCartney/Cat Stevens) and mastered by Hans Olsson at Svenska Grammofonstudion Mastering.

Of interest to fans of Marillion, The Pineapple Thief, Steven Wilson, Riverside…

Gazpacho:
 Jan-Henrik Ohme – vocals
 Thomas Andersen – keyboards, programming
 Jon-Arne Vibo – guitars
 Mikael Krømer – violin, additional guitars
 Kristian “Fido” Torp – bass
 Robert R Johansen – drums

LINKS:

https://www.facebook.com/Gazpacho.Official.BandPage

https://gazpachoband.bandcamp.com/album/magic-8-ball

https://www.instagram.com/gazpachoband

Drew Struzan – album cover artist,RIP

American artist Drew Struzan passed on October 13. He may be better known for the movie posters he created throughout the late 70s and 80s before moving in to comics, book covers… In the early 70s though Struzan illustrated some of classic rocks most iconic covers, working as part of Pacific, Eye And Ear.

His best known illustrations would be Alice Cooper’s Greatest Hits, as well as Welcome To My Nightmare. He also illustrated covers for Black Sabbath (Sabbath Bloody Sabbath), Iron Butterfly, Black Oak Arkansas, and The Beach Boys, among others.

Below is (random) gallery of some of the covers he illustrated.

GRAHAM BONNET BAND announce live album – ‘Lost In Hollywood Again’

Legendary rock vocalist GRAHAM BONNET and his own group, the GRAHAM BONNET BAND, are thrilled to announce the release of their new live album, Lost In Hollywood Again,’ out on December 12, 2025, via Frontiers Music Srl.

To celebrate the announcement, the first single, along with a live video, “Since You’ve Been Gone”, is out now.

GRAHAM commented: “It goes without saying, that ‘Since You’ve Been Gone’ should be the first single off our new live DVD. It’s the song that put Rainbow on the map and jettisoned my career. It’s a damn fine song and I wish I’d written it with Russ Ballard.”

On August 29, 2024, the GRAHAM BONNET BAND took the stage of the world-famous Whisky a Go Go in Los Angeles for a night that perfectly captured the power, history, and energy of one of rock’s most distinctive voices. Filmed and recorded in front of an enthusiastic crowd at the legendary Sunset Strip venue, ‘Lost in Hollywood Again‘ showcases not only GRAHAM’s unparalleled legacy but also the chemistry and fire of his current band.
Lost in Hollywood Again‘ is more than a concert – it’s a celebration of GRAHAM BONNET’s enduring legacy and timeless songs, carried by a legendary voice, elevated by outstanding musicianship, and standing as a testament to the lasting power of hard rock.
The setlist is a journey through BONNET’s remarkable career, featuring classics from Rainbow, Michael Schenker Group, and Alcatrazz, alongside hard-hitting originals from the GRAHAM BONNET BAND catalog. With Graham’s trademark vocals in top form, the performance blends nostalgia with vitality, proving why he remains an enduring force in hard rock.
On this unforgettable night, GRAHAM BONNET’s iconic vocals were supported by the virtuosic guitar work of Conrado Pesinato, the driving bass of Beth-Ami Heavenstone, the soaring keyboards of Alessandro Bertoni, and the precise, energetic drumming of Francis Cassol. Together, they brought each song to life with intensity and precision, creating a truly memorable live experience.
GRAHAM BONNET is known for his powerful and versatile voice. He first achieved chart success in 1968 as part of the duo The Marbles, whose single “Only One Woman” reached No. 5 in the UK. Over his long career, he has recorded and performed both as a solo artist and as a member of several prominent rock and heavy metal bands, including Rainbow, the Michael Schenker Group (MSG),  Alcatrazz, Impellitteri, Blackthorne, and others.
BONNET’s time with Rainbow was a defining period in his career: he joined in 1979, replacing Ronnie James Dio as vocalist, and contributed to the album ‘Down To Earth,’ which included hits such as “Since You’ve Been Gone” and “All Night Long.” After leaving RAINBOW, he resumed his solo work and later joined and formed several bands, including MSG and Alcatrazz.
In later years, BONNET continued to release solo albums, formed the GRAHAM BONNET BAND, and also participated in projects like Michael Schenker Fest. He remains active in recording and touring.

Pre-Order Lost In Hollywood AgainHERE

Track List:

1. Eyes Of The World

2. All Night Long

3. Love’s No Friend

4. Making Love

5. Since You’ve Been Gone

6. Keys solo

7. Lazy

8. Imposter

9. S.O.S.

10. Desert Song

11. Drums solo

12. Night Games

13. Into The Night

14. Assault Attack

15. Too Young To Die, Too Drunk To Live

16. Lost In Hollywood

Band:

Graham Bonnet – Vocals

Conrado Pesinato – Guitars

Beth-Ami Heavenstone – Bass

Alessandro Bertoni – Keyboards

Francis Cassol – Drums

photo credit: Enzo Mazzeo