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Environment Farewells Music Top Stories

Vicky Cornell on 2018 Greece Wildfires: “Heart-wrenching pain for my people”

Vicky Cornell: “Heart-wrenching pain for my people. I can not erase the images of bodies found hugging each other when they died in the fires or jumping off cliffs. Prayers are not enough in such devastation ,while hundreds still missing #keepthepromise for #Greece”

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Farewells Listen Music New Releases Top Stories

Chris Cornell’s Daughter Releases Duet Tribute Recorded “A Few Months Before He Died” – “Nothing Compares 2 U” 2018

Chris Cornell’s daughter, Toni, paid tribute to her late father on Father’s Day by posting a duet of “Nothing Compares 2 U,” which was recorded a few months prior to the Soundgarden frontman’s death.  The song has been embedded below.  Toni also attached the following message:

Toni Cornell:
“Daddy, I love you and miss you so much.  You were the best father anyone could ask for.  Our relationship was so special, and you were always there for me.  You gave me courage when I didn’t have any.  You believed in me when I didn’t.  I miss your love everyday.  Recording this song with you was a special and amazing experience I wish I could repeat 100 times over and I know you would too.  Happy Father’s Day daddy, nothing compares to you.”

About the song, Chris Cornell’s widow, Vicky, explained:
“I’m so proud of my baby girl for having the courage to share this.  July 19, last year she found it in her daddy’s studio files-they recorded it a few months before he died.  You never know what life brings and how we live each day is what’s most important.”

Although the song was popularized by singer Sinéad O’Connor, “Nothing Compares 2 U” was actually written by Prince, originally for one of his side projects, The Family.

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Behind the Album Listen Music Top Stories

Tom Morello, “13 years ago today ‘Out Of Exile’ by Audioslave was released” – Favorite Songs

Tom Morello: “13 years ago today Out Of Exile by Audioslave was released.  Favorite songs on this one?  Mine: “Your Time Has Come,” “Out Of Exile,” “Doesn’t Remind Me,” “Drown Me Slowly,” “#1 Zero.””

Out of Exile is the second studio album by Audioslave.  It is the band’s only album to chart at #1 in the United States on the Billboard 200.  “Doesn’t Remind Me” was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance at the 48th Grammy Awards in 2006.  The album has since been certified ‘Platinum’ for selling over one million copies.

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Farewells Music Opportunities Top Stories

Chris Cornell Vigil @ Hollywood Forever Cemetery – May 18, 2018 Photos/Videos

Chris Cornell Vigil
May 18th @ Hollywood Forever Cemetery
6000 Santa Monica Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90038
7PM

Vicky Cornell:  “It is with great emotion I reach out to all of you as the one year anniversary of my husband’s passing approaches.  Chris was love, so much, by so many.  The children and I are so grateful to you all for being by our sides throughout all of this.  Your love has created a close-knit community;  more like a family;  to grieve with, to provide support, and to help us heal.  We could not have gotten through these last twelve months without you.

“We will be holding a vigil in Chris’s memory at Hollywood Forever Cemetery on May 18th, beginning promptly at 7PM.

“We want to open this up to you, our extended family, and invite you to join us on this day of prayer and remembrance to pay our respects together.  As we know there are millions of fans and not everyone can physically be there, we would be honored if you share posts and videos of how Chris’s music has touched you.  We can feel your love no matter how far.  Light a candle, say a prayer, speak his name….Loud Love X”

Thank you for your continued love, support and strength. #Repost @cornellismyworld with @get_repost ・・・ ??@vickycornell ???@lilycornellsilver??? @toni_cornell ????As a fan of Chris if any of you are reading this I want to thank you for sharing your husband your father, our Chris, I'm so proud of you all, that's how you're getting through the days because your love for him gives you the strength even though your hearts are broken. I wish you all nothing but the best and lots of love and positive vibes.. He was everything to us because we got to grow along with your dad,. Take care, kids and I clearly don't need to tell you to be there for your mum, the sun will shine again and you will smile, although it's going to take a little while.

A post shared by Chris Cornell (@chriscornellofficial) on

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Listen Music New Releases Opportunities Top Stories

New Chris Cornell Song from Johnny Cash Album – “You Never Knew My Mind” / ‘Forever Words’

A brand new Chris Cornell song from the upcoming Johnny Cash: Forever Words album, makes its world premiere Monday (2/26) at 12:05PM EST on Apple Music’s Beats 1. You can now listen to Cornell sing “You Never Knew My Mind” below.

Produced by Johnny Cash’s son John Carter Cash, Johnny Cash Forever Words: The Music will feature poems, written by his father, set to music. The poems will be taken from the recently published Forever Words: The Unknown Poems, a book of unearthed poems found after Cash passed away in 2003, with some dating back to when he was only twelve years old.

Cornell appears on the album alongside Brad Paisley, Jewel, T-Bone Burnett, Kacey Musgraves, Jamey Johnson and more.

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Entertainment Listen Music Top Stories

Vicky Cornell, “Nine months makes no difference”

Vicky Cornell: “Not a day goes by that I don’t find myself trying to figure out some way to change what happened. Nine months makes no difference, I love + miss my husband more each passing day. It’s an unbearable pain that time simply does not heal. I hope sharing mine will help spare others.”

Good Morning America will air an interview with Chris Cornell’s widow, Vicky, on Wednesday, February 21st.   A preview of the segment has been posted below.

Tune in @ 7AM-9AM on ABC

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Gear Music New Releases Top Stories

Terry Date on Dimebag Darrell: “You can’t get his sound unless you have his hands, his head, and his heart. “

The latest issue of my favorite magazine, Tape Op, features an interview with producer/engineer Terry Date.  Date has worked with Soundgarden, Pantera, White Zombie, Mother Love Bone, Limp Bizkit, Korn, Deftones, Prong, Staind, Metal Church, Dream Theater, and Smashing Pumpkins.  Some hand-picked excerpts have been posted below.

Early in your career you produced Mother Love Bone’s Apple. What was it like working with the vocalist, the late Andrew Wood?

I remember a number of things we did with Andy during that record. When we were doing his vocals, I’d set him up in this old ‘70s kind of room – with a drum booth off the side of the live room. Since it was a ‘70s studio, they always put the drums in a dry area and had the big live room for everybody else. Andy always had his keyboard set up in front of him, because he felt comfortable having either his hands on it as he was singing, or hitting a key for a note, from time to time. I put Andy in that little corner alcove, with his keyboard and a microphone, and he always had candles set up on the keyboard for a vibe. I’d have him sing the song three or four times, and record all three takes. When we felt we had something, I’d have him come in the control room, and he and I would sit together and comp the final vocal take. With Andy, I would put some delay and reverb in his headphones while he was singing, just to get the performance. I tried to make the headphones sound as live and inspiring as I could. All these guys – like Andy and Chris [Cornell, of Soundgarden] – were used to playing live. They tended to play medium-sized clubs at that time, so I tried to make it sound somewhere between a medium-sized club and a larger arena. Something to be inspiring when they were singing, [in order] to make the performance come out. Andy’s vocal style was somewhere between David Lee Roth and Freddie Mercury, and his personality was too. I think more than his singing voice, my memories are of his personality, and his charisma as a person. He had this “little kid” quality that was really magnetic. I remember on one particular song we were sitting in the control room listening to vocals, deciding which parts of which takes were the best, when all of a sudden he jumped up and ran out of the room. I was thinking, “What the fuck?” He ran into the vocal booth and there were three-foot flames coming up off the carpet! I guess one of his candles had fallen over, hit the carpet, and started it on fire, so we had a bonfire coming up underneath his keyboard. [laughs] I remember my wife and I driving once, after a Mother Love Bone rehearsal, and we saw Andy walking down the street with his keyboard under his arm. We slowed down, and I said to him, “Andy, rehearsal ended two hours ago. You’re just now leaving?” He replied, “Yeah, I stayed a little longer because I wrote another album.” That’s the way he was. He was so prolific; he lived for it.

Soundgarden’s Badmotorfinger helped kick off a new sound and era for rock. What was it like in the control room, capturing the power of that band live to tape?

Well, the funny thing was Chris was in the control with me, recording! We recorded Badmotorfinger at Studio D Recording in Sausalito, California. It was basically a one-room studio; one big live room, with a couple of little iso-booths. I had Matt [Cameron, drums] in the middle of the room, and then I had Ben [Shepherd, bass] and Kim [Thayil, guitar] in the room with him, but their amps were separated. There wasn’t any place for Chris to be, because his voice is so loud it would have gotten into the drum mics. So Chris was in the control room with me, playing and singing when the band played live.

What was capturing Chris Cornell’s singing like?

Chris did like to have a lot of effects in his headphones while he sang. Not for the final product so much, but it gave him a little bit more confidence with all that reverb and delay. It’s like a guitar player having a little extra sustain or overdrive on their guitar; it makes everything easier to play. He liked to have some of that in his ears. Those two records – Badmotorfinger and Louder Than Love – were a lot of work for him, because it was physically demanding and really hard to hit those high notes. The intensity and difficulty of what he was singing was really hard and [consisted of] high vocals, so it was definitely a process to get those right. He was his own worst critic. He’d know when he had it on certain days, and when he wouldn’t. We’d come in on some days, he’d start singing, and within a half-hour he would say, “It’s not there today,” and we’d go on to something else. He knew what he wanted more than I knew what he wanted; I was there for moral support more than anything else, as well as to give him what he needed technically. So – especially on Badmotorfinger ­– it was a very difficult exercise for him. He pulled it off great, but it was a lot of work for all of us. I like [Neumann U] 87s, but I do remember having a [Neumann U] 67 on him, which has always been one of my favorite vocal mics for either a female or high male vocal. At the time when I was working with Soundgarden, Chris was still primarily singing in that full-voice falsetto; that very high, intense voice. He wasn’t doing the lower, quieter vocals as much. With bands like Soundgarden and Dream Theater, I didn’t get involved with tunings or arrangements so much. I would try and capture them as live as I possibly could. I’d try to capture the vitality of the live show. I wanted them to feel like what they had done on their own was valid, and really good. Then it came down to performance issues and whether or not they were pulling something off in a convincing way. But I didn’t get too involved with micro-managing what they were doing.

Your work with Pantera on Cowboys from Hell and Vulgar Display of Power broke ground with a new hybrid of metal. How did you track Darrell “Dimebag” Abbott’s monster guitar sound?

I get this question a lot from people. The first thing I’m going to say about him, and it’s really true, is you can’t get his sound unless you have his hands, his head, and his heart. He’d always have two amp stacks. One stack was straight and the other ran through an MXR flanger/doubler that was set in a particular way. There was always an MXR foot pedal EQ [six band graphic equalizer] in front of everything, mainly to bump up a little extra overdrive on the front side of the amp head. We always experimented on every record, trying different tube heads, but we never really used one; it always ended up being the Randall amplifiers [RG100H and Century 200]. As far as the mic’ing goes, we did a lot of things early on. I used a technique, for a time, where I would put up four microphones – a microphone on each speaker – it usually was a 57. I’d leave the amp hiss going, put on headphones with a mic through it, and would move the mic until the hiss was as loud as it could be on each individual speaker. I’d end up with four mics on the four speaker cabinets, each one placed to where it was the loudest it could possibly be, so I knew they were all in sync. We would record all the rhythm guitars for the whole album like that. There were other times when I would take a 57, put it straight onto one cone on one speaker, and then take another one and put it at a 45-degree angle [to the first mic] to create a little phase scoop out of it. We would spend a lot of time at the beginning of a record trying these different mic’ing techniques, then we’d settle on something and record the record. But here’s a lesson that I learned early on: we’d record all the rhythm guitars, tear everything down, and then, towards the end of the record, Dime would go, “I’ve got one more part I hear in my head that I want to put on a song or two.” We would throw up one cabinet, and I’d put a 57 on it – because it was a secondary part he was going to throw in. Then we’d listen to it, and it usually sounded better than the rhythm guitars we’d spent all this time mic’ing, in all these exotic ways. I realized that you don’t need a whole lot of fancy stuff with him; just get a mic on him. Keep it simple, and it sounds better. One trick that I picked up from working with Metal Church is that they used to take their picks and scrape them on the sidewalk before they came into the studio – the flat edge – to rough them up and make the picking edges sharper, so that it’s like an ice-skate. You flatten the bottom to make the edges sharper. You get more attack across the strings by doing that, and that was one thing I actually used to do with Dimebag. We’d take a razor blade and sharpen the flat edge of the pick so we’d get a little bit more attack on the pick when he was playing.

Read the entire interview at this location.

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Gear Guitars Music Top Stories

Chris Cornell, “The best way to find yourself as a singer…”

Chris Cornell: “The best way to find yourself as a singer and try different things is literally just to sit in a room and see what your voice will do and try not to be shy about it.”

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Holidays Music Top Stories

Chris Cornell Christmas Video

Vicky Cornell: “Sharing a special Christmas video that Chris made with C (Christopher) 3 years ago for school. While the holidays will never be the same again without Chris, we will always remember his boundless love. Happy Holidays & thank you all for your much needed love and support.”

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Entertainment Farewells Listen Music Top Stories

Alice Cooper Remembers Glen Campbell The Year In Memoriam 2017

Tune in to ABC’s ‘The Year In Memoriam 2017’ special airing this Monday (12/18) at 10PM ET to watch Alice Cooper remember the late Glen Campbell.

The Year in Memoriam 2017:
A celebration of legendary stars and icons who passed away in 2017, including Mary Tyler Moore, Don Rickles, Glen Campbell, Tom Petty, Chuck Berry and Jerry Lewis.

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Music Top Stories

Chris Cornell Song Honored w/ Inaugural ‘Promise Award’

The Los Angeles Committee of Human Rights Watch presented its inaugural Promise Award to the late Chris Cornell in recognition of his song,”The Promise.” The track was written as the ending credits song for a film of the same name. The film tells the story of a love triangle between Mikael (Isaac), an Armenian medical student, Chris (Bale), a Paris-based American journalist, and Ana (Le Bon), an Armenian-born woman raised in France, immediately before the Armenian Genocide.

The Promise Award recognizes an outstanding song, television show, or film that advances the values of equity and justice in an original and powerful way. System of a Down singer and human rights activist Serj Tankian presented the award to Cornell’s wife Vicky, Eric Esrailian (the film’s producer) and former Soundgarden bandmates Kim Thayil and Matt Cameron.

Vicky Cornell commented:
“Thank you to Human Rights Watch for naming Chris Cornell as the 1st recipient of The Promise Award and recognizing his contributions to preserving human rights around the world.”

In addition, Ryan Tedder and Drew Brown of One Republic performed Cornell’s song at the dinner. A video of that performance has been embedded below.

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Ben Folds Pens Paul Buckmaster Tribute

Ben Folds penned a touching tribute to string arranger Paul Buckmaster who passed away yesterday at the age of 71.  Buckmaster’s work can be heard on recordings by David Bowie, Elton John, the Rolling Stones, Leonard Cohen, Guns n’ Roses, Chris Cornell and Carly Simon.

Ben Folds:
“A few words about the late, incredible musician and man, Paul Buckmaster….and I felt I should say a few things about him.

“He made quite an impact on me.

“Paul Buckmaster was best known for his string/orchestra arrangements which accompanied rock and roll records. Many famous ones – Elton John’s early stuff, and David Bowie’s “Space Oddity” at the top of his long career. Many obscure ones too.
He kept going, up until this year. He did some recent Taylor Swift music. He was always working. The endless list of his contributions might be nearly impossible to accurately compile. What I’ve seen on the web seems to leave a lot out. He even worked with Miles Davis. Suffice to say, he was prolific and has his special corner in rock history.

“And kids, there wasn’t anyone else like him. I don’t want to disparage all of the brilliant arrangers out there, but there was Paul, and then there’s everyone else. It’s like his job description was somehow different.

“I believe he was actually a composer. A composer, roaming alone, who parked his work inside ‘the folk music of the day’ as he put it to me once. It’s an arranger’s job to ornament, accent and fill out, which is quite an intense gig in and of itself. Paul seemed to identify the genetic code of a song, and then add the thing that you didn’t know was there before – that explained it all – as the last touch, as rock arrangements are nearly always placed atop an otherwise finished recording. To have added the last word to so many songs, and have that part be the revelation, and often the hook, was an incredible feat that he just kept shaking out of his sleeve, for at least four decades.

“How do you separate the strings of “Tiny Dancer” from that original recording? It’s the part of the composition that makes you feel the denim that was on the cover of the album. I knew the first time I heard “Drops Of Jupiter” it was either Paul or an incredible impression of him. I’m sure if you’d heard the track before Paul composed the strings, it’d have seemed finished. I wouldn’t have known where to cram anything else if someone had given me that track. It’s full without strings. But imagine deleting the strings? He burrowed himself right in there. He dignified, served and starred in the song, with that bizarre syncopation and sense of storm that was in his style.

“Hiring Paul was probably like having Frank Lloyd Wright build your house. You know the stories of people living in their Frank Lloyd Wright homes, and here comes Frank knocking at the door unannounced a decade later to make sure the furniture is where he intended it! In some ways you felt like you were working for Paul and not the other way around! But if you wanted it to be special, then you’d have to navigate the choppy waters of Paul and his ways. It was totally worth it each time, and also for the incredible conversations over dinner when it was finished.

“The first time he arranged for me, on the song “Landed,” I was taken aback at his score. I felt he’d changed something about the song. He’d weighed in strong, almost intrusively I thought. There wasn’t enough time for what he’d done to sink in, and with release date on our tails, I made the decision to leave the strings out. MISTAKE! I regretted it before it hit the stores and made sure all subsequent versions of the song were released with strings. From that point on, when I had the treat of getting to work with Paul, I made space for him. Inside the recording, and time to digest. And it was worth it each time. By the time I got to feature him on “Lonely Avenue” with Nick Hornby, I left him a five lane highway of space in which to work. He didn’t disappoint at all. He completed the tracks as if they were his compositions, and it was a beautiful thing to behold!

“I once asked him to add something ‘kitsch’ to a bridge of a song.
“I don’t know what that means,” he said dryly.
“Well, I was thinking something fun and sort of camp…”
He interrupted me with one more simple “I don’t know what that means.” This time a little slower with a little more baritone.

“I knew to let that go. He was telling me that there’s just the song. Just the melody. Just the meaning. The rest is bullshit and please shut up. And he was right. It was a smack down to remind me to focus on what’s important. He gave me as much encouragement and praise when appropriate. And he blew my phone up the whole time I was working on my concerto to remind me to be me, and not to let ‘classical music’ (a term he didn’t care for) bully me around. And then he’d give me an hour-and-a-half history chapter on Beethoven.

“I hope you all take some time to look into his many contributions. His was mastery and skill that is truly old school, likely not to happen again in quite that way. Pop music isn’t the same after Paul. He left his mark, no doubt. A master craftsman of orchestration with an open mind to the simplest of music. He was a mentor, cheerleader, and brutally honest taskmaster (Paul Taskmaster?) for me and many others. A real artist, and what a character!
The photo shown here was taken in my former Nashville studio, historic RCA Studio A. Paul is conducting as we record his arrangement of my song ‘The Luckiest’ for the Richard Curtis film About Time.”

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Farewells Music Top Stories

Chris Cornell’s Brother Pens Emotional Letter

Chris Cornell’s brother Peter Cornell posted the following message yesterday (08/28/17):

“My Friends:

“Again you humble me with your kindness, empathy, love and support.

“Although I pulled myself off Social Media, I’ve been able to glimpse bits and pieces of the selfless way so many people around the world continue to honor and pay tribute to my Brother.

“I truly couldn’t believe the way you picked up and carried the message of doing push-ups for suicide prevention. Please don’t stop. What a devastating way to have my eyes opened to how many lives around me, and all of us, have been touched by such tragedy. Going forward I hope prevention is a conversation we can have more freely. Removing the stigma that discussing suicide is like speaking about a dirty little secret. If only … what I’d give to have had the tiniest shred of this awareness in early May.

“I cannot deny the pain of this loss. In some ways I cling to it. Refusing to let go because I want to keep my little Brother close, even if all that’s left are memories. At least we are rich with memories. I replay them all to often, starting with our childhood and reliving the glory that was Seattle in the 90’s.

“This process of grief has connected me to so many other grieving hearts and souls. As I said previously, my Brother belonged to the world and so many have been crushed by the weight of this passing. I revived this FB page to return the compassion you have shown to me from the very moments after this tragedy … THANK YOU and THANK YOU AGAIN!!! If it’s possible for this path to walk a little softer, it’s only because I haven’t had to walk it alone.

“Compassion is like a new word to me these days. This horror has connected me to family I have not known for many, many years. It’s a bittersweet connection that is equal parts reliving the devastation and lovingly tearing down the fences that have separated us for so very long. Compassion arms me with the ability to feel for their loss as you and I have felt for each other. In some ways my family lost my Brother twice. That is a burden I don’t share with them. I’ve grown new ears and hopefully a bigger heart.

“I miss my interaction with YOU but a hiatus from social media helps me from continually picking at the wound. It’s unfortunate the social media platform that allows us to share each other’s heartbreak and healing also becomes a forum for conspiracy theories and absurd conjecture that defy decency and continually attempt to blur the facts. The entities that fuel these avenues of chaos are self-serving at best. When is enough enough? Hasn’t the time come for my Brother to be allowed to rest in peace? Haven’t the children endured more than a child ever, ever, ever should?

“Much love to ALL of you!!! Hold your families close. May peace find all of us

“Goodnight Chester. Goodnight Brother.

PC”

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Music Top Stories

Ginger Wildheart Tries to Take His Own Life, “The suicide attempt failed”

According to a recent Twitter post by Ginger Wildheart, the singer/guitarist attempted to take his own life. Yesterday, Ginger tweeted, “Well the suicide attempt failed. Fucking gutted. Currently sectioned for who knows how long.” The tweet was met with a slew of responses from fans, mostly positive, but I think what’s most disturbing were the mean-spirited replies, comments like, “1st thing I learned on guitar, is how hard it is, u have a talent and an avenue to express it. You’re being a selfish prick”, another one read, “Deserves you right. They should throw away the key. You can’t go around assaulting people and expect to walk away. Cunt.”

Just a reminder to those who need to shit on someone in that position – when a person attempts to take their own life, they are at the VERY bottom. The last thing they need is someone spewing hate or showing a lack of sympathy & understanding. Instead, show these people some love, maybe share some insight. If they influenced your life, let them know. It doesn’t take much effort to be nice…But if you just can’t do it and you have to be shitty, then YOU are taking up space on this planet.

Tweets from Ginger:

Well the suicide attempt failed. Fucking gutted. Currently sectioned for who knows how long. -Ginger Wildheart

I won’t fail again. -Ginger Wildheart

My life has become unmanageable under medication.
My latest med, Duloxetine, has damaged and destroyed so much.
Beware of Duloxetine. -Ginger Wildheart

Heard rumours that the new shows are being cancelled?!

If true, this is NOT my decision. I’d have liked a celebration of my music w/guests -Ginger Wildheart

My life is a fucking mess. This shit can’t end quick enough. Who the fuck could miss this fucking place? -Ginger Wildheart

Right it’s been fun guys, and (seriously) moving, but the Americans have woken up now and I can’t be responsible for my replies. -Ginger Wildheart

Ginger Wildheart is an English rock guitarist, singer and songwriter, best known for his band The Wildhearts.

Duloxetine is a medication mostly used for major depressive disorders, anxiety, fibromyalgia and neuropathic pain. It failed to receive US approval for stress urinary incontinence amid concerns over liver toxicity and suicidal events, however, it was approved for this use in the UK, where it is recommended as an add-on medication in stress urinary incontinence instead of surgery.

 

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Music Top Stories

Essential Wax With Buzz Osborne of (the) Melvins

Discogs Blog recently spoke with Melvins’ Buzz Osborne about which records he listens to while on tour. A couple of excerpts can be found below.

Judas Priest – Unleashed in the East (Live In Japan)

Dale and I think this is the best heavy metal album ever made. A highly popular choice on tour. EVERYONE loves this. They better not say otherwise or they’ll get dumped on the side of the road in Alabama to get picked up by the dreaded Southern Sheriff.”

Mentors – Live at the Whiskey / Cathay De Grande

Always a wise choice when everyone’s feeling glum. How the PMRC (Parental Music Resource Center) ever took these jokers seriously is completely lost on me. This is an excellent album in every conceivable way. All American, cool and classy.”

Read the entire article

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Music Opportunities Top Stories Tour Dates

Win tickets to see Prophets of Rage on Their 2017 Tour

Win 2 Tickets to see Prophets of Rage on their 2017 Tour + Deluxe Resistance Party Pack

Available shows to select from:

SEP 7 Boston, MA Paradise Rock Club
SEP 9 Asbury Park, NJ Stone Pony
SEP 10 Philadelphia, PA Theatre of Living Arts
SEP 12 New York, NY Apollo Theater
SEP 14 Washington, DC 9:30 Club

Win 2 Tickets to see Prophets of Rage on their 2017 Tour + Deluxe Resistance Party Pack