🚨🚨🚨Announcing my new album 'Orgy Of The Damned' 😈😈😈 ...made up of some my favorite blues classics recorded with some of my favorite artists, will be available on May 17th... The first song "Killing Floor" - a cover of Howlin' Wolf's iconic song done with my good friend Brian Johnson - is out today! Pre-order it now! iiii]; )' #gibsonrecords
Credit to @slash Credit to @insta360italia 1500 scalini in una location da sogno ma che non ammette errori! 😳 📸 @torquatotesta con #Insta360 X4 Filmato in modalità 360 in 8K 30fps iiii]; )'
Credit to @slash Credit to @thelegendsofmusic Pantera performing “A New Level” Live at Ozzfest in ’98 This song was crafted to match Pantera’s high-energy live shows. Frontman Phil Anselmo said this about the song in an interview: “The ultimate chip-on-your-shoulder type song. We definitely wanted to make a statement musically that would coincide with this live show that we had - the energy that we were putting out there,” Anselmo told us.” Lyrically, the song calls for confidence and unity as the driving rocker reflects not just a resurgence for the band, but also for the metal scene, as they take it to a new level. #Music #Pantera #DimebagDarrel #PhilAnselmo #RexBrown #VinnePaul iiii]; )'
Credit to @slash Credit to @thelegendsofmusic Kiss playing “Deuce” Live on the Midnight Special Gene Simmons on “Deuce”: “’Deuce’ was written in my head on a bus. I heard the lick, the riff, the melody, the whole thing. ‘Deuce’ was written on a bass. It was a very linear song. As soon as the riff came, the first verse came, then I wrote the bridge, and then I wrote the chorus. We arranged it right on the spot and knew that it would be a staple for years. In fact, when we first went on tour with our first record, it was the opening song of the show and we would come back for encores and not have any songs left and do ‘Deuce’ again. Then if we got a second encore we would do ‘Deuce’ again. Lyrically, I had no idea what I was talking about. Sometimes stuff means a lot, sometimes it means nothing.” Paul Stanley on “Deuce”: “The beginning of the song was me ripping off the Raspberries. The beginning of ‘Deuce,’ the thing that starts it off, is me, bastardizing ‘Go All The Way.’” Now here’s Ace on “Deuce”: “It’s my favorite KISS song. When I auditioned for KISS, they said, “We’re going to play you a song for you to listen to, and then try playing along. The song was ‘Deuce,’ and they played it as a three-piece and the song was in the key of ‘A.’ I thought, ‘That’s easy enough,’ so I got up and wailed for four minutes playing lead work over it.” #Music #RockNRoll #Kiss #PeterCriss #GeneSimmons #AceFrehley #PaulStanley iiii]; )'
Credit to @slash Credit to @lordrarerock GILMOUR ERUPTS IN POMPEII - Pink Floyd perform “Echoes Part I” live in Pompeii (1972). The concert was the brainchild of film director Adrian Maben, a Paris-based Englishman who loved Pink Floyd’s music and had approached them to make a concert film which would be more than just a simple ‘concert film’. Maben’s aim was to make a true art movie that did justice to the group’s avant-garde sound, a kind of “Anti Woodstock”. The band was sceptical, but their manager, Steve O’Rourke, offered Maben one ray of hope: “If you find us an interesting enough venue”, he told Maben, “we might reconsider”. Maben found himself alone in what had been the Superbowl of a city that came to an abrupt end one day in 79 AD, he remembers that he was “filled with wonder and a vague sense of disquiet” as he surveyed the scene, to a soundtrack of chirping crickets and squeaking bats, which reverberated eerily in this huge echo chamber. This was the perfect location. 52 years later and the footage and music looks and sounds like it’s from the future. Enjoy iiii]; )'