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Slayer ‘Reign in Blood’ Original Artwork by Larry Carroll Resurfaces – 2024

And Justice For Art:

THE ORIGINAL REIGN IN BLOOD

One of the world’s most important collectors of Metal art recently acquired the original sleeve artwork American artist, Larry Carroll, created for Slayer’s Thrash Metal masterpiece, “Reign In Blood.” At some point, this artwork was supposed to be lost. Now you can see it on this post, framed and hanging on a wall alongside other iconic images.

“Larry Carroll’s original art for ‘Reign in Blood’ is now part of my collection,” says the collector, who prefers to remain unknown. “The mixed media collage measures 72 x 72 Centimeters (without frame) and was in very good hands for the last 30 years. I’m happy to be able to take over this huge responsibility. The texture [of the piece] is amazing.”

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History Listen Music Top Stories

KISS Launches ‘Creatures of the Night’ Tour on This Day in Rock History – Dec 29, 1982 – VIDEO

KISS:

40 Years Ago Today! #KISSTORY: Dec 29, 1982 – We opened the Creatures of the Night Tour in Bismarck, North Dakota.

Did you see a show on the COTN Tour?

PREVIOUS POSTS:

Paul Stanley Talks Creatures of the Night

Gene Simmons Talks Creatures of the Night

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Behind the Album History Listen Music Top Stories

Sharon Osbourne on Why ‘Diary of a Madman’ was Written & Recorded So Close to the Release of ‘Blizzard of Ozz’: “We had no money” – Ozzy, Randy Rhoads, Bob Daisley, Lee Kerslake

The Immortal Randy Rhoads: SHARON ARDEN ON WHY SHE MADE THE DECISION TO HAVE THE GUYS WRITE AND RECORD DIARY OF A MADMAN SO CLOSE TO THE COMPLETION OF BLIZZARD OF OZZ…

Blizzard was recorded, and they went out and toured. Ozzy still could not get an American deal for the album release. Nobody wanted to know of Ozzy Osbourne in this country. They had done a tour of Europe and there was nothing for the guys to do. They were hanging out. We didn’t have any money 💰. The only way we could physically keep the band together was to keep working. The only thing we could do was to do another album 💿.

I said to them, “I’ll go to America 🇺🇸 and try to get something together, and you come up with another album 💿. It was a way of keeping them all together as a unit, because we didn’t have any money 💰. If they had just sat and did nothing, it would have drifted apart. They sat and wrote it. It was done in six weeks. Blizzard came out in England 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 in September 1980. They were in the studio writing Diary by that Christmas. It was that quick.

We had no money 💰 and the only way we could survive was to give Jet Records more product. So, when they worked, they got paid. If they didn’t work, there was no money 💰. – Sharon Arden (Osbourne)

Wikipedia: During the recording of Diary of a Madman, drummer Lee Kerslake says the band members were given no money to live on, prompting them to approach management. Shortly after, both Kerslake and bassist Bob Daisley were fired.

Lee Kerslake:

“Everything was working fine. It was only when Sharon (Osbourne) came in that we had a problem. When she started managing—taking over—she wasn’t the manager until Diary of a Madman. Before that was her brother, David. He didn’t really want to handle it. He had too much to do for Don (Arden) in the office. So, she came in and it started to get edgy. But we never suspected a thing until we went away on holiday. Next minute, they’re rehearsing with Tommy Aldridge and Rudy Sarzo, and going to America.”

According to Randy Rhoads’ brother Kelle Rhoads:

“Randy felt a bit rushed for Diary of a Madman. He wished he had a little bit more time; he was a perfectionist. Of course, what’s on there is pretty good, but he had a little more time to work on the first record.”

During an interview with The Metal Voice, bassist Rudy Sarzo said:

“I was on the bus when Ozzy got the mixed version of the record. I saw his expression and I heard how he felt about it. He thought it was crap, the mix.

“If you really look back at that record, it was the first album of the ’80s to be mixed with so much ambiance. It sounds like an ’80s record, and nobody had heard that before. It was completely different from the sound of Blizzard of Ozz, and Ozzy just had no idea that this was going to be the sound of the future.”

Photographer:
Watal Asanuma 📸

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Cliff Burton to Kirk Hammett After Learning Metallica’s ‘Master of Puppets’ Went Gold: ‘I wanna buy a house where I can shoot my gun that shoots knives!’ – Interview

Goldmine Magazine: When Goldmine spoke to Metallica on the album anniversaries of both “Master of Puppets” and the The Black Album. An excerpt from the interview can be found below. You can read the entire feature @ this location.

EXCERPT:

Recording “Master of Puppets” at Sweet Silence studios in Copenhagen began Sept. 3, 1985. Unlike when Metallica recorded “Ride The Lightning” there, and slept on the floor upstairs, the band could now afford to stay at the luxury Scandinavia Hotel: Lars and James sharing one room; Kirk and Cliff another.

“For a bass player, he played a lot of guitar,” Kirk recalled of his room-sharing days with Cliff. “In fact, he would drive me crazy with it. We’d come back to the hotel, like totally wasted at three in the morning. But instead of crashing out, Cliff would immediately want to set up the electric guitars and start playing.”

They also played a lot of poker. “We’d go out and play poker for eight hours straight after being up for 24 hours,” said Kirk. “We’d find a seafood restaurant that was open, eat raw oysters and drink beer, scream at the natives while we were drunk.” They were, “some of my best memories” from that time.

Though it was always “Lars and James that were more or less in charge,” in terms of pure musical vision, “From an artistic point of view, it would probably be Cliff. We were pretty pleased with ‘Ride.’ But with ‘Master,’ we really tried to make everything actually better than we were capable of. We knew we had a bunch of really good songs, so we put the bar up really high.”

“I never expected it to be the success it turned out to be,” said Kirk. He recalled being on the tour bus when they found out it’d gone gold. “The first thing Cliff said was, ‘I wanna buy a house where I can shoot my gun that shoots knives!’ That was a typical Cliff thing to say.”

The question hardcore fans continue to ask to this day is: What would Cliff Burton have thought of the Black Album? Prophetically, however, in what proved to be his final interview, less than 48 hours before his death, Cliff told Swedish writer Jorgen Holmstedt he thought Metallica would become more “mellow and melodic” as time went by, speculating that they would work with “some big-name producer.” Adding, “If we get our wish, we’ll probably record in Los Angeles.”

Cliff’s musical tastes were certainly broad enough to encompass the 360-degree turn The Black Album had made. As Kirk told me, “If we’d made another album with Cliff, I think it would have been extremely melodic.” Cliff had begun listening to the Eagles, R.E.M and Kate Bush. “Cliff was the most open-minded musically of us all,” said Kirk. “He’d have dug it.”

You can read the entire feature @ this location.

Wikipedia:

Master of Puppets is the third studio album by the American heavy metal band Metallica, released on March 3, 1986, by Elektra Records. The album peaked at number 29 on the Billboard 200 and received widespread acclaim from critics, who praised its music and political lyrics. It is widely considered to be one of the greatest and most influential thrash metal albums of all time and is credited with consolidating the American thrash metal scene.

It was certified six times platinum by the RIAA in 2003 for shipping six million copies in the United States and was later certified six times platinum by Music Canada and platinum by the BPI. In 2015, Master of Puppets became the first metal recording to be selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the National Recording Registry for being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.”

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Judas Priest Producer Tom Allom on K.K. Downing & Glenn Tipton’s Rivalry During ‘Screaming for Vengeance’: “They both were trying to play things that they couldn’t play” – 2022 – Interview

Recording Academy / GRAMMYs: While a variety of musical forces helped launch the metal paradigm that dominated a lot of ‘80s music, Judas Priest spearheaded this shift with Screaming For Vengeance. 🎸 You can read the entire interview @ this location.

On the Hit Single “You’ve Got Another Thing Coming”:

TOM ALLOM:

They had this idea with the riff and everything, which I think Glenn (Tipton) mostly came up with. “Let’s try and run it through” and I was in the process [of mixing]. It wasn’t the last song [to be done] because I was checking out the drum sound. I had the drums all mic’d up ready to go, and they wanted to run through the track. So, they set the guitars and the bass up in front of the drums and they ran it through without headphones. The guitars were turned down with the overdrive turned on quite high for the crunch.

I recorded this run through, and I said, “Well, you’re not gonna get a better take on that.” And they wanted to redo all the guitars and do the usual stuff and have the big ambient side on the guitars. I think I let Glenn overdub one other rhythm guitar a little. I remember it as clear as daylight. They might remember it differently. Then Rob (Halford) went through two or three lyric changes and melody changes. I have to say, I’m not always right, but I bloody well was on that occasion.

On the Song “Electric Eye”:

ROB HALFORD:

I remember when I was writing the lyrics for “Electric Eye.” And, of course, this was before the internet. I was reading about spy satellites and the way that our privacy was going to be more and more difficult to hold on to. That was enough for me to get my brain cells going for a lyric that is so appropriate 40 years later, more so than ever.

And equally with all of the suppression and repression that’s going on in the world today — whether it’s freedom of speech or people invading other people’s countries — there’s the title track, “Screaming For Vengeance.” I feel like I’m not making statements, but obviously I am. It seems like a good conduit for the music. The feeling about writing lyrics that have more to them than just tits and ass has always been a thrill for me. I’ve always enjoyed marrying up the words to these brilliant instrumentational sounds. I just listen to the start of “Riding On The Wind,” for example, and the way that begins with very dramatic percussive work. Equally, the time signatures in the title track are really unusual. So I’m stimulated lyrically by the music, or the way the music is pushing me.

Rob’s vocals change during “Electric Eye” — he’s portraying a sentient spy satellite or camera. It starts off with this cold human voice in the verse, and by the time we get to the chorus he has this maniacal electronic quality.

TOM ALLOM:

That was very deliberate. I remember there were three different sections to each verse and chorus. I wanted to treat each one slightly differently. Because it is about an electric eye, I used a harmonized version of a voice in with it…but heavily harmonized. Sort of pitched a third down, mixed in a bit.

Priest previously had dueling guitars and big guitar harmonies in the ‘70s, but this was the first album that they noted who did what solo in the liner notes. And Glenn and K.K.’s signature interplay really gelled here.

TOM ALLOM:

I felt like it was a great rivalry between them to outdo each other. They both were trying to play things that they couldn’t play, and they went on working on them until they could. It was that rivalry that made the guitars so bloody brilliant. I can particularly remember Glenn starting to come up with a solo and he was struggling with it. He would work on it for days, if necessary, until he could play it.

Obviously, we were able to punch in mistakes and all that, but these were the analog years. By the time they perfected it, they would go out and play that track live, no trouble at all. That was very good to see.

There’s just something about that interplay that was unique. Sometimes their styles would meld together and mirror each other a bit.

TOM ALLOM:

When they were both playing rhythm guitar on a track and they were essentially playing the same thing, because their styles were different it made the sound really big. The intonation was different from each of them, and that difference made it bigger than if one of them was playing the part and then double tracking it. They each created a different vibe off their instrument.

Tom came from a totally different social background than you guys did. What is it about him that you worked with him for a decade? He wasn’t a working-class guy from the Midlands, he was a little more “posh.”

ROB HALFORD:

He’s just a beautiful guy. He’s a wizard in the control room. He knows what he’s talking about. He gave us and still gives us confidence when we work together. We will listen to what he has to say, and he was always full of great ideas. He was an accomplished musician himself as far as being able to play the piano and pick up the notes. All of the great things that producers should be able to do.

Do you remember the inspiration for Doug Johnson’s striking cover image of The Hellion? Did you guys have a lot of input into it?

ROB HALFORD:

Yeah, I said to Doug, “We have this song called ‘Screaming For Vengeance.'” Just in my mind, I didn’t know what it was. Because I was talking to an American guy and I was thinking about America, I was thinking about the national bird, the bald eagle. And I said, “I just have this vision in my mind of this screaming eagle that’s coming down to attack. It’s full of vengeance. I don’t know what it wants to avenge, but it’s in the mood for some mayhem and vengeance and all of those other emotions.” That was all he needed.

You can read the entire interview @ this location.

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Behind the Album Cool Chitz History Listen Music New Releases Top Stories

The Doors ‘Morrison Hotel’ Classic Albums Documentary on Prime, Google Play, iTunes – 2022 – Trailer – The Making of…

The Doors: Tomorrow, get ready for the Classic Albums documentary on MORRISON HOTEL available on streaming services.

Featuring interviews with Robby Krieger, John Densmore, Ray Manzarek and more, watch on
Prime Video, Google Play, and iTunes.

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Art Behind the Album Cool Chitz History Music Top Stories

Metallica ‘Master of Puppets’ – The Cover Art Story – Don Brautigam

Revolver: The story behind the iconic cover art of Metallica’s ‘Master of Puppets’

If you look closely at the bottom corner of the picture, you can see my initials, ‘D.B.,’ in the grass,” Don Brautigam told us in 2007. The world-class painter and illustrator was talking about the nightmare-at-Arlington-Cemetery-scene that he created for the cover of Metallica’s 1986 album, Master of Puppets. “I wish I could remember more,” he added, “but I suppose you just stop keeping track after the first few hundred paintings or so!” Considering his résumé, which includes illustrations for the covers of books by Stephen King (The Stand), Dean Koontz (Dragon Tears) and H.G. Wells (The Island of Dr. Moreau) — not to mention album covers for the likes of Mötley Crüe (Dr. Feelgood), AC/DC (The Razor’s Edge), Anthrax (Persistence of Time) and James Brown (The Payback) — it was easy to understand why the details of an image Brautigam painted 22 years ago (in December of 1985, to be exact) might be a bit, well … fuzzy. –READ MORE

Read the entire feature @ this location.

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Engineer/Producer Eddie Kramer Talks About Recording Jimi Hendrix’s Version of “All Along the Watchtower”

Jimi Hendrix (Official): Eddie Kramer recently sat down with the crew at Mix with the Masters to tell the story behind the recording of “All Along The Watchtower.”

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Death Producer Talks Chuck Schuldiner and ‘Scream Bloody Gore’ – Randy Burns Interview Excerpt


This excerpt was taken from a full in bloom interview with producer/engineer Randy Burns.

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP / SOUNDCLOUD WIDGET BELOW.

You can also listen to this episode on APPLE PODCASTS and SPOTIFY.

INTERVIEW DESCRIPTION:

Producer Randy Burns talks about recording Chuck Schuldiner during the Death ‘Scream Bloody Gore’ sessions.

Randy Burns Interview Excerpt via YouTube

Randy Burns Interview Excerpt via Soundcloud

fullinbloom · Death Producer Talks Chuck Schuldiner and ‘Scream Bloody Gore’ – Randy Burns Interview Excerpt
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Twisted Sister ‘Stay Hungry’ Producer Calls Dee Snider a “Two-Faced Con Man” – Tom Werman Interview Excerpt

This excerpt was taken from a full in bloom interview with producer Tom Werman. You can listen to the entire interview @ this location.

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP / SOUNDCLOUD WIDGET BELOW.

YOU CAN ALSO LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA APPLE PODCASTS AND SPOTIFY.

INTERVIEW EXCERPT DESCRIPTION:

Producer Tom Werman talks about Dee Snider’s issues with Twisted Sister’s 1984 breakthrough album, ‘Stay Hungry.’

Tom Werman Interview Excerpt via YouTube

Tom Werman Interview Excerpt via Soundcloud

fullinbloom · Twisted Sister ‘Stay Hungry’ Producer Calls Dee Snider a “Two-Faced Con Man” – Tom Werman Excerpt
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Great White Vocalist Jack Russell talks 1984 Self-Titled Album, Shot in the Dark, Once Bitten, Hooked, Interview Excerpt


This is a BONUS EXCERPT from the full in bloom interview with Jack Russell. This old school interview was originally published as a print interview & is not part of the podcast. The audio was transferred from a handheld digital recorder, so please keep that in mind. You can read the entire interview: PART I & PART II

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP / SOUNDCLOUD WIDGET BELOW.

You can also listen to this episode on APPLE PODCASTS and SPOTIFY.

INTERVIEW EXCERPT DESCRIPTION:

Jack talks about Great White’s 1984 major label debut, ‘Shot in the Dark,’ ‘Once Bitten,’ ‘Hooked,’ ‘Can’t Get There From Here,’ & more.

Jack Russell Interview Excerpt via YouTube

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fullinbloom · Great White Vocalist Jack Russell talks 1984 Album, Shot in the Dark, Once Bitten, Hooked, Interview
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Behind the Album Interviews Listen Music New Releases Podcast Podcast Excerpts Recording Top Stories

Davy Vain Interview Preview – Vain ‘No Respect’ Inside the Album Excerpt 2020-2021

This is a PREVIEW CLIP from the Vain No Respect Inside the Album interview with vocalist Davy Vain.

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP / SOUNDCLOUD WIDGET BELOW.

You can also listen to this episode on APPLE PODCASTS and SPOTIFY.

INTERVIEW EXCERPT DESCRIPTION:

Davy talks about the upcoming Vain album and their 1989 major label debut, ‘No Respect.’

Davy Vain Interview Preview via YouTube

Davy Vain Interview Preview via Soundcloud

fullinbloom · Davy Vain Interview Preview – Vain 'No Respect' Inside the Album 2020-2021
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Behind the Album History Listen Music Podcast Excerpts Recording Top Stories

Twisted Sister’s Dee Snider Freaks Out After Producer Tom Werman Suggests Saxon Cover for the ‘Stay Hungry’ Album

This excerpt was taken from a full in bloom interview with producer Tom Werman. You can listen to the entire interview @ this location.

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW EXCERPT VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP / SOUNDCLOUD WIDGET BELOW.

YOU CAN ALSO LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA APPLE PODCASTS and SPOTIFY.

INTERVIEW DESCRIPTION:

Producer Tom Werman talks about the time he suggested to Dee Snider that Twisted Sister include a Saxon cover on their 1984 ‘Stay Hungry’ album.

Tom Werman Interview Excerpt via YouTube

Tom Werman Interview Excerpt via Soundcloud

fullinbloom · Twisted Sister’s Dee Snider Freaks After Tom Werman Suggests Saxon Cover for the ‘Stay Hungry’ Album
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Producer/Engineer Tony Platt – The full in bloom Interview – Talks Mutt Lange & Compares AC/DC ‘Back in Black’ & Foreigner ‘4’ Recording Techniques

This is a full in bloom interview with producer / engineer Tony Platt.

INSIDE THE ALBUM(S)
AC/DC ‘Back in Black’ vs Foreigner ‘4’
Tony Platt Compares Recording Techniques & Approaches

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP / SOUNDCLOUD WIDGET BELOW.

You can also listen to this episode on SPOTIFY.

Renowned engineer / producer Tony Platt talks about recording / production / mixing techniques on AC/DC’s ‘Highway to Hell,’ ‘Back in Black,’ ‘Flick of the Switch,’ Foreigner’s ‘4,’ working with producer Mutt Lange in the studio and more.

Tony Platt Interview via YouTube

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Engineer Tony Platt Compares AC/DC ‘Back in Black’ & Foreigner ‘4’ Recording Techniques – Talks Mutt Lange – PREVIEW Interview Clip 2020

The excerpt below was taken from full in bloom interview with producer / engineer Tony Platt.

PREVIEW CLIP: The full-length interview will be published on Thursday, September 10, 2020.

If you would like to be notified, subscribe to our YouTube channel @ this location.

LISTEN TO THE EXCERPT VIA APPLE PODCASTS, SPOTIFY, OR THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP / SOUNDCLOUD WIDGET BELOW.

EXCERPT DESCRIPTION:

From the Upcoming AC/DC ‘Back in Black’ & Foreigner ‘4’ Inside the Album(s) Interview – Tony Platt talks Mutt Lange and compares AC/DC ‘Back in Black’ & Foreigner ‘4’ recording techniques.

Tony Platt Interview Excerpt via YouTube

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fullinbloom · Tony Platt Compares AC/DC ‘Back in Black’ & Foreigner ‘4’ Recording Techniques-Interview+Mutt Lange
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Don Dokken – The full in bloom Interview 2020 – Don Talks Tooth and Nail, The Lost Songs, Great White, George Lynch, Tom Werman, Geoff Workman

This is the full in bloom interview with Don Dokken.

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP / SOUNDCLOUD WIDGET BELOW.

You can also listen to this episode on APPLE PODCASTS and SPOTIFY.

INTERVIEW DESCRIPTION:

Don talks about his recovery from neck / spinal surgery, The Lost Songs 1978-1981, Great White, Tooth & Nail, Tom Werman, Geoff Workman, George Lynch & more.

PURCHASE OPTIONS FOR DOKKEN THE LOST SONGS 1978-1981

Don Dokken Interview via YouTube

Don Dokken Interview via Soundcloud

fullinbloom · Don Dokken Talks Tooth and Nail, The Lost Songs, Tom Werman, George Lynch & More – Interview 2020