Bryan Jay:
Dwain Miller and I have put together a brand new version of our band “DOGBONE”. We will be releasing our first single early 2023 and then a 4 song EP to follow.

Dogbone in the ’90s
Bryan Jay:
Dwain Miller and I have put together a brand new version of our band “DOGBONE”. We will be releasing our first single early 2023 and then a 4 song EP to follow.

Dogbone in the ’90s
Ron Keel:
I have been admitted to the hospital with a respiratory infection and will most likely remain here for the next several days. I regret not being able to perform our scheduled shows this weekend in Ohio and Indiana and I apologize to everyone. As a workaholic and control freak, this is a worst-case scenario for me. I have never cancelled a show due to medical reasons. I’m sure the Columbus venue will provide refund instructions. Patreon members who bought 1/2 price tickets will receive your refunds directly from me asap. Thank you all for understanding.

Metal Blade Records: Happy 40th to the record that started it all! Metal Massacre. The original compilation gets it’s long-awaited reissue on vinyl for the first time since 1984! Out 4.22. PRE-ORDER🤘🏼
Originally released on June 14th, 1982, Metal Massacre showcased the best of Los Angeles’ unsigned acts of the time such as METALLICA, RATT, and MALICE, and has since become a cornerstone of METAL BLADE RECORDS.

SIDE A
01. Steeler “Cold Day in Hell”
02. Bitch “Live for the Whip”
03. Malice “Captive of Light”
04. Ratt “Tell the World”
05. Avatar “Octave”
SIDE B
06. Black ‘n Blue “Chains Around Heaven”
07. Cirith Ungol “Death of the Sun”
08. Demon Flight “Dead of the Night”
09. Pandemonium “Fighting Backwards”
10. Malice “Kick You Down”
11. Metallica “Hit the Lights”
Vinyl Features:
+ Translucent Ruby Red Vinyl
+ Single Jacket
+ 4-Page LP Booklet
+ Limited Edition
Ron McGovney:
No Life Til Leather version of Hit the Lights.

Ron Keel: “The Right To Rock” Test Pressing from 11-15-1984 on Ebay @ this location. – 100% proceeds towards Keelaholic & friend Tonya Eaton’s battle with cancer – Tonya’s GoFundMe Page



This excerpt was taken from the full in bloom interview with KEEL / Cold Sweat guitarist Marc Ferrari.
LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP / SOUNDCLOUD WIDGET BELOW.
You can also listen to this episode on APPLE PODCASTS and SPOTIFY.
Marc Ferrari talks about working with KISS co-founder Gene Simmons while recording KEEL’s ‘The Right to Rock.’
Marc Ferrari Interview Excerpt via YouTube
Marc Ferrari Interview Excerpt via Soundcloud

This is the full in bloom Inside the Album: KEEL – The Right to Rock interview with guitarist Marc Ferrari.
LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW VIA THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP / SOUNDCLOUD WIDGET BELOW.
You can also listen to this episode on APPLE PODCASTS and, for the first time, SPOTIFY.
Marc talks about recording KEEL’s 1985 major label debut album, ‘The Right to Rock.’
Marc Ferrari Interview via YouTube
Marc Ferrari Interview via Soundcloud

The excerpt below was taken from full in bloom’s Inside the Album: KEEL – The Right to Rock interview with KEEL guitarist Marc Ferrari.
PREVIEW CLIP: The full-length KEEL The Right to Rock Inside the Album interview will be published on Monday, July 6, 2020.
If you would like to be notified, subscribe to our YouTube channel @ this location.
LISTEN TO THE EXCERPT VIA APPLE PODCASTS, OR THE EMBEDDED YOUTUBE CLIP / SOUNDCLOUD WIDGET BELOW.
Marc talks about recording KEEL’s 1985 major label debut album, ‘The Right to Rock.’
Marc Ferrari Interview Excerpt via YouTube
Marc Ferrari Interview Excerpt via Soundcloud

Steeler / Keel Vocalist
Ron Keel
full in bloom: How did the original Steeler lineup change into the one we all know? Was it your choice or did the original lineup quit?
Ron Keel: Unfortunately, it was my choice, and not a very good one. The level of musicianship on the LA heavy metal scene was very competitive – there were some amazing guitarists, drummers, and bassists and I thought that’s what I wanted. I found out the hard way that the best musicians don’t always make the best bandmates, and there’s no substitute for chemistry and camaraderie. I still believe that if I had been mature enough and strong enough to hold the original band together and work hard, we would have been one of the premier bands of the time.

full in bloom: How did you end up working with Yngwie Malmsteen?
Ron: Mike Varney played me his demo tape, and like I said, I wanted the best and I got the best. I invited him to come to America and join Steeler.
full in bloom: While Yngwie was in the band, were you friends, or did he mostly keep to himself?
Ron: He was very focused on his guitar, it never left his hands. I always try to be friends with the people in my bands – if you’re in my band, I’ll take a bullet for you. Some of those friendships outlast the bands, and some don’t.
full in bloom: How long was he in the band and why did he leave?
Ron: About four months, nine shows plus the recording sessions for the album. He left because he wanted to take the necessary steps towards fulfilling his own musical vision, and no one can blame him for that.

full in bloom: How long was he in the band before you cut the record?
Ron: Just a couple of months. With the exception of “No Way Out” and “Abduction”, the songs were already written and we were all in a hurry to get in the studio and make our first album.
full in bloom: How did bassist Rik Fox come into your life?
Ron: Of all the guys in Hollywood that looked like rock stars, I thought Rik looked more like a rock star than anybody else. He’s also a really nice guy, a good spirit. So with that lineup I had the best guitarist in the world, and the best looking rock star on the planet playing bass, but the chemistry amongst the whole team was never there, unfortunately. Rik and I remain friends and I enjoy that.
full in bloom: How many copies of the Steeler album have been sold? It says on your site that it is the largest selling independent record of all time.
Ron: I have lost track of the number. I’m still waiting for the gold record….we got the “Biggest Selling Independent Album” stat from the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America). The album continues to sell, and has never been out of print in 22 years, thanks to Shrapnel Records keeping it alive.
full in bloom: Do checks still arrive in the mail from your Steeler sales.
Ron: Shrapnel has always been timely and accurate with their royalty payments….I wish I could say the same for all the other record companies I’ve worked with.
full in bloom: What was the largest residual check you received from those sales.
Ron: I really have no idea; sorry…I usually cash them rather quickly.
full in bloom: Is there anything you wish you would have done differently in the Steeler days?
Ron: Life’s too short for regrets, who knows how things might have turned out. But I really should have kept the original lineup together, as I said earlier.

full in bloom: What are your 3 most fond memories of being in Steeler?
Ron: I guess I keep the memories, Steeler and otherwise, in two piles, good and bad. If I had to pick 3 out of the good pile, the first would be the week our guitarist, Michael Dunigan, and I went out to Los Angeles to scout gigs and get the ‘lay of the land’, so to speak. It was an unbelievable time for hard rock in LA, and as soon as we got to the Sunset Strip we knew we were home. The second fond memory would be the entire time from the drive to LA, when the whole band and crew was moving out there together, up until the time the original lineup started to splinter. That was a very magical experience, being young and full of dreams and living in a place where they could all come true. And the third memory would have to be the first time we heard ourselves on the radio, on KLOS in Los Angeles. You know, if you watch any biographical music movie, where they are dramatizing the life of a famous musician or singer, there’s always the scene where they get played on the radio for the first time, and everybody’s jumping up and down and screaming. It’s really like that.

full in bloom: Is there any chance of a Steeler reunion, one that would feature all the original members of the classic lineup, including Yngwie Malmsteen?
Ron: Not much chance of that. Rik Fox and I have talked about working together, but it’s too soon to make any announcements.

full in bloom: In 1984, you formed Keel and released Lay Down the Law. How many copies were sold before you were able to land a deal with A&M?
Ron: Actually, the deal with A&M/Gold Mountain was sealed before the Lay Down The Law album was even finished. We had just finished mixing it and had to start recording our second album, The Right To Rock, almost immediately.
full in bloom: Why hasn’t there been a re-release of the Keel self-titled album and The Final Frontier? Are you aware of how much money people spend on those cds?
Ron: Ownership of those properties has taken years to establish. Yes, I’m aware of the value of the original versions, it is high time to re-release them and we’re working hard to see that it happens. I’ve also been working on releasing a collection of music and videos from throughout my career, and from all my various projects. I’m confident we’ll be able to get these discs out in the coming years.
full in bloom: How does it work when a different label wants to re-release one of your titles? Explain the licensing process.
Ron: Establishing ownership is the first and biggest step – you can’t wheel and deal if the property isn’t yours to begin with. Many times you’re dealing with international legalities and musicians that you haven’t seen or spoken to in years, so it can get complicated. There are other artists who have been much more active in repackaging and licensing their previous releases – I have always tended to keep forging forward, focused on the here & now and the road ahead, with projects like IronHorse, Keel & Wayne, and the Acoustic Outcasts. Only recently have I begun to put my history into perspective, and I’m able to look at my accomplishments objectively.
full in bloom: Does the new label offer a bonus, or do you just get royalty checks as they sell?
Ron: Both or either, depending on what the property’s worth. It’s a good idea to get as much as you can up front, because even with signed contracts royalties can sometimes be hard to collect, especially from international deals. But this holds true with any situation – whether you’re signing a new record deal or licensing material that’s twenty years old…it’s difficult at best to get the truth about how many units are sold, and when it comes to receiving timely and accurate royalty statements, you have two choices: hope for the best, or take legal action.

full in bloom: What was the basic royalty rate when you played in Keel?
Ron: For the artist, between twelve and eighteen percent. My major label deals were structured on a ‘points’ basis, with one ‘point’ equaling one percent of the ‘suggested retail price’. Points were like stock, and you could deal with them – for instance, you give points to producers or other people that could help your career. The guys in the band usually ended up with a point apiece, and the suggested retail price when The Right To Rock was released, in 1985, was $8.98. So that’s almost nine cents per album sold in your pocket, after you recoup the two million dollars the label invested in you.
full in bloom: Did you ever receive payments in the early days, for Keel records, or were you always recouping.
Ron: In KEEL, we were fortunate to have record companies that believed in us enough to invest heavily – for instance, during the ‘Final Frontier/self-titled’ era, MCA dumped about two million into the band – but it was unfortunate that they made the wrong decisions about selecting singles, marketing the band, and so on. Rather than being smart and creative, they thought they could break the act by throwing money around, and it got to the point where we would have had to sell five million albums just to break even. So yes, in regard to artist royalty, we never recouped – we stayed alive and kept the machine moving forward with income from merchandising, publishing, and touring income.
full in bloom: How many copies of The Right to Rock were sold, originally?
Ron: The official number was just a hair below 500,000. Because if they admitted that they sold over half a million, they would have owed us a huge bonus and advance for the next album. My belief is that The Right To Rock is only one of the gold albums I have done that was never certified gold.
full in bloom: Why wasn’t The Final Frontier released on A&M?
Ron: We were actually signed to Gold Mountain, which at the time was a subsidiary of A&M. When The Right To Rock did so well, Gold Mountain decided to cash in on a huge offer that MCA put on the table – basically pimping us out to the highest bidder. At the time, it was very flattering to be wanted and to be fielding such huge offers, but in the end I think it hurt – with MCA, even though they held up their end financially, we were never their baby – just a bastard child they had adopted in hopes of competing in the heavy metal marketplace.
full in bloom: When I heard the Keel / Self-titled release, I remember thinking that you guys were going to be huge. The tracks sounded great, the songs were also great and catchy. Why do think that didn’t happen? Could it be – MCA (Metal Cemetery Association)?
Ron: Indeed, that’s a great sounding album, the songs, musicianship, production, vocals, the whole package is something I’m extremely proud of and still enjoy listening to today. I think the mistakes with that album, and with Final Frontier, were the choice of singles – “Because The Night” & “Somebody’s Waiting” were great songs, but they weren’t KEEL songs – they were covers, and both were MCA choices to release as singles. Every other label and act at the time were having multi-platinum success with a tried-and-true formula: the first single was geared to establishing the band’s identity, like ‘The Right To Rock’, or ‘Youth Gone Wild’, or ‘Welcome To The Jungle’….the second single was usually a more commercial radio-friendly tune, and then the third single was your power ballad. With ‘The Right To Rock’, we didn’t even have a second single…the only time we ever had a second single was ‘Tears Of Fire’, which was a pretty big hit in a lot of major markets.
I’m not one to dwell on mistakes that were made decades ago – life goes on, and there are more songs and more shows and more adventures around the bend. I feel fortunate that I was able to live the dream, and have so many goals fulfilled….life is like a chess game, and I’m just happy to still have some powerful pieces on the board.
full in bloom: What are your 3 most fond memories of being in Keel?
Ron: There are so many – there’s no way I can narrow them down to three. Signing your first major label recording contract, seeing your albums climb the charts and having your songs all over the radio and MTV, playing in front of 86,000 at the Texxas Jam opening for Van Halen….playing Madison Square Garden sold out three nights in a row….headlining our sold out tour of Japan….watching the lights go out on the Eiffel Tower after a sold-out show in Paris…..not to mention all the laughs, high fives, good friendships and other dreams come true. Pick any three of those memories you like, they are all my favorite.

full in bloom: Is there anything you wish you would have done differently in the Keel days?
Ron: Of course. Mostly just little things – I remember spending $30,000 one month just rehearsing, with full production, sound, lights, a basketball court in our rehearsal room….we should have just rented a barn in the middle of nowhere for $500 bucks and pocketed the rest….

full in bloom: On to Fair Game, your post-Keel band. Did you ever mix business with pleasure?
Ron: I’ll leave that to everyone’s imagination…..if I did, I would never admit it….
full in bloom: How did the Saber Tiger release come about?
Ron: Japanese guitar star Akihito Kinoshita had just signed a big deal with Fandango Records, and they were looking for an American vocalist to do the album. I had dropped off the radar in Japan when I started singing country music, and had a good reputation and large following there. I was singing country music in Arizona at the time they contacted me, and I had just come home from a brutal gig where I sang for five hours for something like fifty bucks. I’d had a few cocktails, as I do from time to time, and when I came home there was a fax on my desk that read something like, “Hello, this is Tosh Sakabe from Fandango Records in Japan, we have just signed guitar star Akihito Kinoshita and we are wondering how much you would charge us to make contract to sing on his new album. Please call us, ” and there was a phone number.
Well, I had a couple more cocktails, and I called them – it was the middle of the night for me, but mid-afternoon in Japan – and spoke to Sakabe-san, and he reiterated what he had said in the fax: “How much you charge to make contract to sing on this album,”. I told him I’d do it for $75,000….he said he’d discuss it with his boss and call me right back. I had a couple more cocktails, and then he called back, and said “We give you $30,000,” and I said “Hell Yes, I’m there…”
I love that album, and it remains my finest metal moment. I never toured with the band, so the only was to gauge fan response was by chart position and sales, both of which were very good. The whole experience was extremely taxing on me physically and vocally, but incredibly rewarding and one of the most interested and satisfying projects of my career.
full in bloom: Did you receive royalties for sales, or did they just pay you for the session work?
Ron: I was paid the flat fee for the session, but also wrote all the lyrics, for which I should be receiving royalties. They sent them the first year, but nothing since….they even re-recorded the album with a Japanese singer, used all my lyrics, and never sent me a dime, but I got almost 40K out of the deal, great memories, and a great album, so I’m cool with it. I would like to release the disc myself to make it available for fans who might hesitate to shell out forty or fifty bucks for the import.
full in bloom: What is your most disgusting habit?
Ron: Smoking.
full in bloom: What is the most feminine thing you do?
Ron: I really like to cook and spend time in the kitchen. Is that more feminine than wearing makeup?
full in bloom: If there is a God, what is the first question you would ask God when you arrive?
Ron: If there is a God, I doubt I’ll get the chance to ask him anything…but if there is, and I did, I would really be stupid if I didn’t drop to my knees immediately and ask for forgiveness.
full in bloom: Greatest Rock band of all time?
Ron: The Beatles.
full in bloom: What were you doing 40 minutes before you sat down to do this interview?
Ron: Working on the computer, fighting a losing battle to catch up on business and correspondence.
This interview was originally conducted in 2005.
Ron Keel: Happy 36th anniversary to my debut album, STEELER, released on this date in 1983. I appreciate the fans who embraced this moment in time and I’m looking forward to 2020’s FNA Records release “COME HELL OR HOLLYWOOD: 1981-82” featuring the original lineup.

full in bloom: What are your 3 most fond memories of being in Steeler?
Ron Keel: I guess I keep the memories, Steeler and otherwise, in two piles, good and bad. If I had to pick 3 out of the good pile, the first would be the week our guitarist, Michael Dunigan, and I went out to Los Angeles to scout gigs and get the ‘lay of the land’, so to speak. It was an unbelievable time for hard rock in LA, and as soon as we got to the Sunset Strip we knew we were home. The second fond memory would be the entire time from the drive to LA, when the whole band and crew was moving out there together, up until the time the original lineup started to splinter. That was a very magical experience, being young and full of dreams and living in a place where they could all come true. And the third memory would have to be the first time we heard ourselves on the radio, on KLOS in Los Angeles. You know, if you watch any biographical music movie, where they are dramatizing the life of a famous musician or singer, there’s always the scene where they get played on the radio for the first time, and everybody’s jumping up and down and screaming. It’s really like that.
full in bloom: How did the original Steeler lineup change into the one we all know? Was it your choice or did the original line-up quit?
Ron Keel: Unfortunately, it was my choice, and not a very good one. The level of musicianship on the LA heavy metal scene was very competitive – there were some amazing guitarists, drummers, and bassists and I thought that’s what I wanted. I found out the hard way that the best musicians don’t always make the best bandmates, and there’s no substitute for chemistry and camaraderie. I was lucky enough to find that again with KEEL, but it’s very rare and underrated. I still believe that if I had been mature enough and strong enough to hold the original band together and work hard, we would have been one of the premier bands of the time.
full in bloom: How does Yngwie Malmsteen end up joining the band?
Ron Keel: Mike Varney played me his demo tape, and like I said, I wanted the best and I got the best. I invited him to come to America and join Steeler.
full in bloom: While Yngwie was in the band, were you two friends, or did he mostly keep to himself?
Ron Keel: He was very focused on his guitar, it never left his hands. I always try to be friends with the people in my bands – if you’re in my band, I’ll take a bullet for you. Some of those friendships outlast the bands, and some don’t.
full in bloom: Is there anything you wish you would have done differently in the Steeler days?
Ron Keel: Life’s too short for regrets, who knows how things might have turned out. But I really should have kept the original lineup together.
Monsters of Rock Cruise: #FBF COLD SWEAT….Hitting the high seas on MORC 2020! #monstersofrockcruise
#FBF COLD SWEAT….
Hitting the high seas on MORC 2020!#monstersofrockcruise pic.twitter.com/o1qSyOJOqr— monstersofrockcruise (@MonstersCruise) August 23, 2019
Badlands Bassist
Greg Chaisson
The full in bloom interview with Badlands bassist Greg Chaisson is now available. LISTEN TO THE ENTIRE INTERVIEW VIA THE CLIP ABOVE OR ON YOUTUBE.
An excerpt taken from the beginning of our interview has been transcribed below. You can listen to the entire interview via the embedded YouTube clip above or at this location. Check back for more video / transcribed excerpts from this interview.

full in bloom: Tell me about your new band, it’s Kings of Dust?
Greg Chaisson: Yeah, it’s called Kings of Dust. I’ve had the band for awhile. I actually had the band when I went out on the road with (Jake E. Lee’s) Red Dragon Cartel in 2014. But when I got sick and when I was doing all my cancer treatment and all that stuff, I just put it on hiatus. I really didn’t have the energy until probably last summer and by then we had changed drummers and guitar players. So, it’s me and the singer is Michael Beck, who was part of the Red Dragon Cartel cavalcade of singers when they went out in 2015, when they had singers that would do like two or three weeks with them. He was one of those guys…one of my best friends here in Phoenix. We write well together. So, it’s me and him…I have a drummer named Jimi Taft, excellent drummer. I always tell people, had Jake and I decided to do another band or another version of Badlands back when the band broke up, because we were talking about getting a new drummer and a new singer, Jimi would have been the guy, really great, versatile drummer. Then I got a young guy, a 26 year old guy plays guitar with us. His name is Michael Arms and he’s a really good guitar player. He’s a young guy but he’s got kind of an old soul. He has his finger on the pulse of a lot of ’70s music where a lot of my inspiration comes from when I’m writing. So, I’m pretty excited about it. They’re actually doing guitars this week. Bass and drums are done. They’ve been doing guitars all week and I think they’ll probably go until the middle of next week. Then I think they’ll start vocals or maybe solos, I don’t know what the plan is. I don’t go in to hear what they’re doing until they have enough stuff down for me to go yea or nay.

full in bloom: Something will be out a few months from now? What do you think?
Greg: Worse case scenario, early summer. The singer owns the studio so we have the luxury of unlimited studio time. That’s his full-time job, the studio, he’s always recording…and he also kind of works at one of the few studios in Nebraska. So, because he owns it, we took six days to do basic tracks. A lot of people go in and they only have two or three days. We’ve had no budget as far as the recording. So, I think late spring / early summer. I’ve had a number of smaller labels approach me about it but I haven’t even had a conversation with them. They’ve just sent me messages about it saying, ‘hey, we heard what you posted online.’ So, everyone seems to be pretty favorable. So, I’m looking forward to doing it.
full in bloom: Very cool. I’m assuming it’s rock n’ roll?
Greg: It’s very reminiscent, musically, of Badlands. That’s one of the things about Jake and I is I like the way that he writes. I kind of always wrote that way, too. So when we were doing Badlands I thought, ‘well, if I’m ever going to do something on my own I would probably stay on this kind of course.’ It’s not exactly like it but it’s got a lot of the same flavors that Badlands had. No one could replace Ray (Gillen), and Michael doesn’t sound anything like Ray, and I didn’t want anyone who sounded like Ray. In my mind, I haven’t heard anyone who does it right. I’ve heard a lot of guys who could hit the notes but it doesn’t sound like Ray. Ray had a certain tonality to his voice that I’ve never heard that many people do. The guy who sings with Jake now, Darren James Smith, I think he does a good job on the Badlands material. He doesn’t sound like Ray but he has a certain Ray-like quality that I really like. I mean, Oni Logan could get a little of that going on and Robert Mason does a good job with it. If I was going to say, ‘hey Jake, let’s put Badlands back together and get one of these guys,’ that would make sense. But for what I’m doing, I don’t want to have too close of a comparison to what Badlands did, other than the fact that I happen to write the same kind of music that Jake does. But I don’t want a Jake E. Lee clone, and I don’t even know if there is one. I don’t want a Ray Gillen clone. So, I wanted it to have its own qualities as well. I think I’ve achieved that, I’m pretty happy with it.
full in bloom: Are you guys gigging?
Greg: No, we’ve never done a gig. Once we’re done with the record, and once we see what’s going to happen, I’m sure we’ll gig locally. I’m obviously not looking to go on a three month tour or anything like that. I have commitments here at the store that I have. But I could see where maybe we could go out on some weekend stuff. We’re all looking forward to playing. We all have connections. As a matter of fact, Red Dragon Cartel just played here on Sunday and we got offered to open the show and I turned it down.

full in bloom: And you guys turned it down?
Greg: Yeah, I turned it down. I didn’t want to do it because I haven’t actually seen Jake, except one time, since 2014. I didn’t want to be distracted doing a gig, having to get our equipment torn down. I just wanted to spend the time and just kind of hang out and watch their show. I ended up going up to play a song; he called me up to play a song. I went up and played “High Wire.” There’s a video of it on YouTube I’m told. That was real fun. My wife and kids were there, so they got to watch me go up and do that. The response was real nice.
full in bloom: Did you say you had been diagnosed with cancer?
Greg: I was diagnosed with cancer in April 2015, stage 4 tongue cancer. In April of 2015, they said I had between eight to ten months to live. I said, ‘no, I don’t think so.’ I had a sixteen year old daughter at that point and I wasn’t checking out while she’s sixteen years old. I’m kind of a fighter, anyway. So, I just said, ‘nah, ain’t gonna happen.’ I had to quit the band (Red Dragon Cartel) and quit a lot of other things. I quit my job that I had at the time. I took the treatment, which was they took out all my lymph nodes on the left side of my neck. And then I had forty-one doses of radiation in my mouth and fifteen doses of chemo. I went from 195 (lbs) down to 121. I was declared cancer-free in October 2015. But it took me a couple of years to just get my strength back. It’s amazing and actually kind of frightening what you have to go through to still be here.
full in bloom: Right.
Greg: I had the radiation, which radiation in your mouth burns off your taste buds. So, you don’t want to eat anything. For four months I ate a couple of protein shakes. I drank a couple of those a day. I’d have some jello and some chicken broth. That’s what I lived off of for four months. People say, ‘oh man, you lost weight, how’d you do it?’ Yeah, you don’t want to do it they way I did it. Cancer sucks no matter what and none of the treatments are fun, and this isn’t just me saying this, it’s pretty well documented, head and neck cancer treatment is some of the most brutal cancer treatments you can get. Having said that, I’m alive to say how brutal it is. But as I went through it, I never wavered and said ‘screw it, I want to give up.’ I knew it would be rough. Like I said, I had a sixteen year old daughter. My son was only twenty-one at the time. I wasn’t ready to go anywhere at that point. I’m not ready now. I’m pretty happy to be here and it had given me a lot of opportunities. The downside is I had to quit Red Dragon Cartel but Jake and I have been friends for a long time and that wasn’t going to change anything.
full in bloom: Is there not an option to join again or can you not because of the store?
Greg: Well, a couple of reasons. I couldn’t join because of the store right now and the other thing is Jake has a bass player, Anthony Esposito. They’re good friends. They used Anthony’s studio in Pennsylvania to make the record. I think Anthony and Jake co-produced it and I think they co-wrote all the songs. Anthony did a really good job playing bass on that. I saw them the other night, I was very impressed with them; I was very impressed with the band in general. If anyone gets a chance to go see Red Dragon Cartel, it’s a good show. I really enjoyed it. I was very impressed with Anthony. So, will Jake and I do something in the future? Yeah maybe, I don’t know. I would always be up for it. But as far as Red Dragon Cartel is concerned, you know, they’re touring on their second record, Patina. They’ve got another month or so on this leg, then they’re going to Japan, and then they’re going to come back and do some more shows. Even if Jake called me right now, I have too much of a commitment, to the store that I run, to leave. In a year or so, if he wants to do something besides Red Dragon Cartel, I’d always be down for that. He’s my favorite guitar player, you know, one of my best friends…more like a brother. People always say, a brother from another mother…two sides of the same coin. I would always be up for playing with him, that would be a no-brainer for me.

full in bloom: Do you want to plug the store that you work at?
Greg: Yes. It’s called Bizarre Guitar and Drum in Phoenix, Arizona. It’s about a 6000 sqft store and we carry roughly about fifteen hundred / sixteen hundred guitars and we have drum sets and all that kind of stuff. It’s independently owned. The woman that owns it, Susan Alexander, lives in North Carolina and I see her about one week out of the year. She kind of just lets me do what I want to do and as long as we’re making money and everyone’s happy, and she’s happy, it’s a great gig. I had told her that I would do the store for at least five years and we would talk about it after that. Five years will be up this time next year, so we’ll see what it is she wants to do and see what I want to do. At that point, maybe Kings of Dust will be wanting to go out on the road, or maybe Jake would want to do another project and I would be up for that, or maybe I’ll just stay here and do this. The one thing about having cancer, especially when they’re telling you you’re not going to live, is I don’t look too far down the road these days. I’m looking forward to summer coming, I haven’t looked too far beyond that.
full in bloom: You’re there during the day at the store?
Greg: Yeah, I’m there five days a week. We’re open seven days a week but I’m there Tuesday through Saturday. I’m on the floor, there’s only five of us that work there. I’m on the floor selling, along with my other responsibilities.

full in bloom: Do people come in and hit you up for autographs?
Greg: Yeah, pretty frequently. A lot of people have said, ‘hey, will you sign my…’ and I say, ‘yes, send me a self-addressed stamped envelope with whatever in it and I’ll sign it and send it back,’ as long as they’re paying for it. I don’t require any financial payment for that sort of thing. If it’s important to them, then it’s important to me. I just signed something for a guy today. He sent me a Voodoo Highway cassette cover and I signed it and sent it back. Even if they don’t have anything they’ll say, ‘can we take a photo?’ So, there’s a lot of photos of me and people I’ve met. Some of them I’ve met on the road. Some of them I’ve never met but I’m friends with them on social media. So, it’s pretty cool. I’m grateful that people would still remember or think enough of whatever I’ve been involved in that they would want to do that. There’s certain people that if I met them I would want to get a picture with them, so I totally get it.
full in bloom: Of course. Who were some of your biggest influences?
Greg: Starting out my first influence was Mel Schacher who plays bass in Grand Funk and then Felix Pappalardi from Mountain. Greg Ridley from Humble Pie. Andy Fraser from Free. Martin Turner from Wishbone Ash. Tim Bogert when he was in Cactus. And then my main influence, I don’t really play like anybody but if you took about twenty guys that I could name and throw them all in a stew, I would play a bit like all of them…Rob Grange from the classic Ted Nugent stuff. But my main guy is John Entwistle from The Who.
…continued…
There is a lot more interview to go. We still talk about Greg’s time in Surgical Steel, Steeler, Legs Diamond and more. Plus, we go ‘Inside the Album’ with the 1989 self-titled debut release from Badlands. You can listen to the entire interview via the embedded YouTube above, or directly on YouTube at this location.
Ron Keel: “April 7 1984 – the debut concert of Keel! FULL SHOW VIDEO online at patreon.com. $6.99 unlocks all content (over 50 private posts already – more daily) – ‘Hardcore’ Patrons receive $20 credit in our new online store (over 30 items/more weekly). LOTS to release in Jan!”



Make sure to read our old school full in bloom interview with Ron Keel.

Los Angeles-based concert promoter Gina Zamparelli died on May 21, 2018 after battling glioblastoma, an aggressive cancer of the brain. She was 59 years old.
Gina Zamparelli was the first woman concert promoter to produce shows in major venues with national-level artists in the United States. In addition to producing sold-out concerts at Perkins Palace, The Roxy Theatre, The Whisky a Go Go, The Hollywood Palladium, The Santa Monica Civic Auditorium and The Wadsworth Theatre, her work also helped several bands secure record deals.
Zamparelli was the daughter of Sri-Lankan model and Miss Universe title-holder Maureen Hingert and American designer Mario Armond Zamparelli.
Jack Russell: “Heaven gained an Angel yesterday! The First Lady of The California 80’s Music Scene Gina Zamparelli was called to Heaven. Sweet Gina, You will be missed so much by family and friends and let’s not forget her love for animals!
Gina, Thank you for all you did in the early years of Great White and so many others bands. Your love for the music and the business! Your kind heart and friendship through the years. So glad we reconnected at The Rose in Pasadena late last year. Enjoy your wings Sweet Gina! I know you will have an All Access Pass in Heaven! God bless your family and countless friends. Till we meet again………….”
Ron Keel: “The rock n roll business in Heaven just got one hell of an upgrade. On behalf of all current and former members of my bands and the entire Keel family, our condolences to the legions that love Gina Zamparelli and the thousands of lives she touched in a positive way.”
Armored Saint: “The Armored Saint family sends condolences to the family and friends of Gina Zamparelli who passed away on Monday from a brain tumor. Gina was instrumental in vitalizing the local music scene in the San Gabriel Valley in Los Angeles which is where our band started. When Heavy Metal was a new term, Gina promoted shows in the Pasadena area and gave Armored Saint many of our fist gigs playing alongside WASP, Ratt, Great White, Steeler, Black and Blue, Malice and Odin to name a few. The San Gabriel Metal scene started right then and there in 1982, 83. Thank you Gina, what a great time that was. We wish the family well and may Gina rest in peace.”
RIP #GinaZamparelli We’re going to miss you. pic.twitter.com/SSiFOZGqpz
— Slash (@Slash) May 23, 2018
ABC7 Los Angeles recently conducted an interview with musician Marc Ferrari. The former Keel guitarist talked about his new children’s book called Don’t Dilly Dally, Silly Sally. A clip of the interview can be viewed above.
“Those who have children often say that being a parent is the most rewarding thing in life,” says Ferrari. “We all know that kids bring immense joy to our lives but they can sometimes be frustrating when they don’t do what we want them to when we want them to. My amazingly talented and beautiful daughter was no exception and at a very early age she showed a proclivity for procrastination. Whenever we were running late (which was most often the case!) I used to say “Don’t Dilly Dally Silly Sally” and the title stuck with me. This was the inspiration for my second book which was recently published by Belle Isle Books. Told in playful rhyme, Don’t Dilly Dally, Silly Sally is a tribute to all the Silly Sallys of the world who march to the time of their own beat, and to the parents, grandparents, and caregivers who love them. This delightful book celebrates uniqueness, shares a valuable lesson, and plants the seed for ultimate success.”

Age Range: 4 – 8 years
Grade Level: 1 – 6
Written by Marc Ferrari
Illustrated by Felipe Diaz Huarnez
Purchase the book on Amazon
In addition to selling over 2 million albums with Keel, Ferrari formed MasterSource, which became one of the most successful independent music publishing companies in the world, licensing over 4,000 songs to film and television.
Make sure to read our old school interview with Marc Ferrari.

Keel Vocalist / Guitarist
Ron Keel
FIB MUSIC: Other than the Keel reunion, what are you up to these days?
Ron Keel: The KEEL reunion has been pretty much a full time job since we made the decision to move forward, almost a year ago now. I turned over my production interest in the Vegas country show and put my previous rock band K2 on hiatus in order to focus on KEEL. It got even more intense when we decided to create a new album, because we were determined to do things right and make every aspect of this reunion special.
FIB MUSIC: Describe a typical day in the life of Ron Keel.
Ron Keel: I take each day as it comes, and try to work as hard as I can to accomplish the tasks at hand. The only time a day becomes ‘typical’ is when we’re doing shows – then you get into the grind of traveling, airports and vans and hotels, soundcheck, gig, meet & greet, partying, then start back at the top.
Right now I am deep into the vocal sessions for the new KEEL album. Those days are very ritualized in terms of how I prepare for the session – after a pot of coffee I have a tuna salad sandwich on wheat with tomatoes, and listen to the demos of the song of the day, making final adjustments to the lyrics and getting my lyric sheets organized. Each line is numbered for reference, and I highlight certain parts where I want to try harmonies. I try to do all my thinking in advance so by the time I get to the studio I can just feel it. I like to start early, by 11 AM. I’m recording the vocals at my good friend Paul Shortino’s home studio, and the vibe is great, we’re making some magic and it’s a very fun process. I’ll actually be bummed when we’re done with this record because I’m having so much fun singing and working with Paul.
After a session, there’s not much left of me. I leave it all there and exhaust myself physically, mentally, and vocally – then dinner and couch time, and a vain attempt to catch up with e-mails and phone calls that I missed while screaming my guts out all day.
FIB MUSIC: What are the last two CD’s you bought?
Ron Keel: The latest from Nickelback, “Dark Horse,” which is fucking brilliant, and “Black Ice” from AC/DC, which is also brilliant. I stopped listening to new music when I started writing new KEEL songs earlier this year, so I have a list of stuff I’m looking forward to getting when the sessions are done. A lot of people don’t realize that when your making an album, a lot of the work is constantly listening to what you’re doing, evaluating, tweaking stuff, getting inside the tunes and inside the tracks. There’s not enough of me left to listen to outside music during a phase like the one I’m in right now.
FIB MUSIC: Tell us about the Keel reunion show in Hollywood. What was it like playing live with the guys after so many years? Any highlights from the show?
Ron Keel: It felt great, an incredible rush – but there was also a lot of pressure. I’ve done thousands of shows in my lifetime, but rarely has one carried so much weight; I personally felt a huge responsibility to the other guys in the band, our loved ones and friends, our fans from all around the world who believed in us and deserved a great show. Dee Snider said it best – “A good reunion show will make you feel young; a bad reunion show will make you feel old.” Well, after that first gig in Hollywood, I felt like I was 23 again. KEEL has always been about good times and fun, good music and real attitudes and emotions, and that night was a celebration of all that.
FIB MUSIC: What was the vibe around the whole reunion? Any cool stories?
Ron Keel: I’m not blowing smoke when I say the vibe has been incredible. Everyone has the perfect perspective on this, we’ve taken care of our business properly, we get along like brothers, we communicate well, and everyone is even better musically now than we were before. The players are all even better with some maturity and experience under their belts, and I believe I have come a long way vocally as well. The whole thing is a cool story – a story about a band that has come full circle and is having the time of their lives reliving the dream.
FIB MUSIC: Any cool stories from the Southwest festival in San Antonio?
Ron Keel: Nothing unusual, unless you call getting no sleep, flights almost cancelled and the concert being delayed due to bad weather, cool. It was another day at the office for us, and we enjoyed Texas immensely despite the logistical challenges. We had played in Phoenix the night before, our flight to San Antonio was delayed, and at one time the pilot actually came on the loudspeaker and told us we might not be able to land there and we’d be diverted to Amarillo. But we made it, unfortunately everyone except the headliner (Queensryche) had to cut their show length due to the weather delay but we loved every minute of it.
FIB MUSIC: Besides M3 and Rocklahoma, what other festivals will you guys be playing?
Ron Keel: We are already starting to lock down some events for next year. I am going to the U.K. in October/November to open 9 shows for Y&T, doing my solo acoustic gig and hopefully paving the way for KEEL to return to the U.K. and Europe next year. We also have high hopes of returning to Japan. I think we proved this year that KEEL is a solid addition to any festival bill, and hopefully there will be a lot more in the future. We’re not setting any limits on this thing; we have a great new album coming out in 2010 and hope to keep rocking on the Streets Of Rock N Roll for some time to come.

Keel Guitarist
Marc Ferrari
FIB MUSIC: Other than the Keel reunion, what are you up to these days?
Marc Ferrari: Staying busy running a division of Universal Music Publishing called MasterSource, being a devoted Dad to my 6 year old daughter, husband to my wife and trying to put as many miles as possible on the hiking trails.
FIB MUSIC: Describe a typical day in the life of Marc Ferrari.
Marc Ferrari: Up at 6:00 am or so and then either working out or taking my daughter to school. Head to my local Starbucks for my daily jolt then to the office all day. At night I am usually writing new songs or working on keel business.
FIB MUSIC: What are the last 2 CD’s you bought?
Marc Ferrari: The first Montrose release and Rick Derringer Live.
FIB MUSIC: On the band’s website, Ron is quoted as saying he would never perform under the name Keel without Bryan, Dwain, and yourself. What does that loyalty mean to you?
Marc Ferrari: I think we all realize that the group “Keel” was special and that all our talents combined to make it what it was. Every time bands go out with less and less original members, it dilutes the legacy.

FIB MUSIC: Have you hung out with any of the Pantera boys lately?
Marc Ferrari: I actually participated in the book signing here in L.A of the Diamond Darrell book the family just released. Was great to see Vinny, Rita and their Dad, Jerry. I had lunch with Rex about 3 years ago but have not seen Phil in over a decade.
Read the entire interview on our sister site