Stream The New Short Film From Arcade Fire And Director Spike Jonze

Arcade Fire

Arcade Fire, Photo: Wikipedia

By: Staff

Arcade Fire’s songs have always had a cinematic quality to them, but now the Montreal indie rockers are actually venturing into film-making. Scenes From The Suburbs, their new short film, is now streaming for free. Watch it in its entirety here. (Update: Not available for the US, unfortunately.)

Scenes From The Sububs, which is also featured in the new deluxe version of the Arcade Fire’s Grammy-winning album The Suburbs, was directed by Spike Jonze, of Being John Malkovich and Where The Wild Things Are fame, according to NME.

Will Butler, multi-instrumentalist and brother of Arcade Fire frontman Win Butler, recently talked with NME about the short film. “Hopefully it doesn’t explain the album more,” he said. “We wanted it to be another slant, coming from the same place, so that the songs kind of illuminate the film and vice versa.”

The film expands on the themes of the album through a narrative about Kyle, a troubled youth living in the suburbs, who has to deal with his friend Winter changing into a different person over the course of a summer.

Arcade Fire will be headlining Hyde Park in London this coming Thursday with Beirut, Mumford & Sons, The Vaccines, and Owen Pallett.

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Stream The New Short Film From Arcade Fire And Director Spike Jonze

Arcade Fire

Arcade Fire, Photo: Wikipedia

By: Staff

Arcade Fire’s songs have always had a cinematic quality to them, but now the Montreal indie rockers are actually venturing into film-making. Scenes From The Suburbs, their new short film, is now streaming for free. Watch it in its entirety here. (Update: Not available for the US, unfortunately.)

Scenes From The Sububs, which is also featured in the new deluxe version of the Arcade Fire’s Grammy-winning album The Suburbs, was directed by Spike Jonze, of Being John Malkovich and Where The Wild Things Are fame, according to NME.

Will Butler, multi-instrumentalist and brother of Arcade Fire frontman Win Butler, recently talked with NME about the short film. “Hopefully it doesn’t explain the album more,” he said. “We wanted it to be another slant, coming from the same place, so that the songs kind of illuminate the film and vice versa.”

The film expands on the themes of the album through a narrative about Kyle, a troubled youth living in the suburbs, who has to deal with his friend Winter changing into a different person over the course of a summer.

Arcade Fire will be headlining Hyde Park in London this coming Thursday with Beirut, Mumford & Sons, The Vaccines, and Owen Pallett.

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Green Day Brain Stew Guitar Tab

“Brain Stew” – Green Day

Free Official TAB of the Day

Click the link below to get the TAB: The first 10 readers each day get the TAB for free and everyone else gets a 50% discount until midnight after the freebies run out, then it’s 15% off after that.

Remember, the first ten downloads are free so act fast before they’re all gone.

Archive – Want to see other TAB’s of the day? Click here to access the TOD archive.

******

Overview: What Makes This Song Great

  • Difficulty: Beginner
  • Genre: Alternative Rock
  • Guitar TAB: Available Here
Brain Stew

Brain Stew

With its iconic five descending power chords, “Brain Stew” is one of the simplest and catchiest songs by punk rockers Green Day. The chords are the same five as the famous intro chords of “25 or 6 to 4” by Chicago, but in “Brain Stew,” those five chords make up the music for the entire song. Because of its simplicity, many garage bands play this song as one of their first covers. Released in 1996 as a single for Green Day’s fourth album, Insomniac, and was originally a medley, with their “Jaded” beginning right at the end of “Brain Stew” with no break in the music.

******

Tab Sample Page

Get the officially licensed TAB for “Brain Stew” Available Here

Green Day Brain Stew Guitar Tab

Green Day Brain Stew Guitar Tab

******

Don’t forget to visit United We Tab to download this chart today!

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Green Day Brain Stew Guitar Tab

“Brain Stew” – Green Day

Free Official TAB of the Day

Click the link below to get the TAB: The first 10 readers each day get the TAB for free and everyone else gets a 50% discount until midnight after the freebies run out, then it’s 15% off after that.

Remember, the first ten downloads are free so act fast before they’re all gone.

Archive – Want to see other TAB’s of the day? Click here to access the TOD archive.

******

Overview: What Makes This Song Great

  • Difficulty: Beginner
  • Genre: Alternative Rock
  • Guitar TAB: Available Here
Brain Stew

Brain Stew

With its iconic five descending power chords, “Brain Stew” is one of the simplest and catchiest songs by punk rockers Green Day. The chords are the same five as the famous intro chords of “25 or 6 to 4” by Chicago, but in “Brain Stew,” those five chords make up the music for the entire song. Because of its simplicity, many garage bands play this song as one of their first covers. Released in 1996 as a single for Green Day’s fourth album, Insomniac, and was originally a medley, with their “Jaded” beginning right at the end of “Brain Stew” with no break in the music.

******

Tab Sample Page

Get the officially licensed TAB for “Brain Stew” Available Here

Green Day Brain Stew Guitar Tab

Green Day Brain Stew Guitar Tab

******

Don’t forget to visit United We Tab to download this chart today!

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KISS’ Paul Stanley on Blowing Stuff Up

KISS’ Paul Stanley has pulled back the curtain on the band’s early forays into pyrotechnics, which were a lot more cavalier than the high-tech displays employed today.

In an interview with Glen Shaefer at The Province, Stanley said: “We have the best people working with us. When we first started doing it, it was crude to say the least. There were no licensed pyrotechnicians. You had some guy who liked to blow stuff up and you put him on salary.”

Stanley says the production values have come a long way since then, with the show “mutating” rather than evolving or progressing. “Do we blow stuff up? Hell yeah. Do we play real loud? Hell yeah. That’s what we do, we entertain. We’re a killer rock band that prides itself on being entertainers.”

The 59-year-old Stanley also opened up about his fitness regime, which he says is partially driven by vanity. “Nobody wants to see a fat guy in tights,” Stanley says. “At least not in this band, or at least not me. There’s a certain discipline involved, and I’m as vain as the next guy.”

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Rex Brown Leaves Down

Bass player Rex Brown has officially departed Down, the band he started with fellow former Pantera member Phil Anselmo in the early ’90s.

Brown confirmed his departure to Patrick Musumeche of 8countnews.com. “Down’s not officially over. I’m just officially out of the band,” Brown said. “Things came to a head and they’re better off doing what they’re doing. They’ve got Patrick Bruders playing bass and I kind of lost my passion after a while. There were some other problems that we had to address and it just turned out better that we just parted ways.”

Brown took time out of the band after a serious bout of pancreatitis in 2009, and stayed off the road while sorting out some personal issues. Brown confirmed tensions within the band in a recent interview with Focus In The Mix with Denise Ames when he spoke of a rift with Anselmo: “We’re having a little marital spat, so… I’ll just leave it at that. I’m in the doghouse,” Brown said.

Down was formed in 1991 as a side project of Pantera’s Anselmo and Brown and Corrosion of Conformity’s Pepper Keenan. They have broken up and reformed twice and have released three studio albums, NOLA (1995), Down II: A Bustle In Your Hedgerow (2002) and Down III: Over The Under (2007).

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This Day in Music Spotlight: Leather-Clad Elvis Retakes His Throne

Special thanks to ThisDayinMusic.com.

As the ’60s rolled in, Elvis Presley was still The King, but there were chinks beginning to appear in his armor. His music was still topping the charts, but a lot of that music – most of it, actually – came from the soundtracks of the profitable, yet cheesy, Hollywood films he was churning out. That’s not to say that the music was lacking; some of his career-best songs came from that era, including “Can’t Help Falling in Love” (1961) and “Return to Sender” (1962). Also, three of his movie soundtrack albums climbed to #1 in the first half of the decade. By anyone’s standards, those are solid achievements.

But Elvis wasn’t just anyone.

Things were not as they used to be, and Elvis’ slide into commercial mediocrity, if not downright obscurity, seemed to happen almost as quickly as his meteoric rise to superstardom a decade earlier. It didn’t help that his core fan base was now a number of years older. They were getting married, having babies – growing up. Couple that with the overnight ascension of a certain mop-topped quartet from Liverpool, and just like that, the King of Rock and Roll was all but relegated to the “where are they now” file.

From 1964 through 1968, Elvis saw only one of his singles crack the top 10 – and that was the 1965’s “Crying in the Chapel,” which was actually recorded five years earlier. After the release of his ’62 album Pot Luck, Elvis didn’t put out another new studio album (not counting movie soundtracks) until 1967’s gospel album How Great Thou Art, which brought him his first Grammy (for Best Sacred Performance).

Elvis seemed to hit rock bottom with the release of his 1967 Clambake movie soundtrack, which resulted in record-low sales. As historians Connie Kirchberg and Marc Hendrickx noted, “Elvis was viewed as a joke by serious music lovers and a has-been to all but his most loyal fans.” Elvis’ films were moving in the wrong financial direction, too, and his manager, Colonel Tom Parker, was finding it increasingly difficult to secure his usual million-dollar per film fee.

So, Parker turned to NBC and struck a $1.25 million deal for both a movie (Change of Habit) and TV special. The initial concept for the TV special was for an extravagant show complete with multiple set and costume changes, dance sequences and huge productions built around Elvis’ biggest hits. The goal was to revitalize The King’s reputation after years of silly, insipid and formulaic films.

Four days of rehearsals and music recording took place in Hollywood, beginning on June 20. It was here where the unexpected happened. After a long rehearsal session, Elvis and the other musicians would wind down by playing old blues and rock songs. The show’s producer, Steve Binder, noticed how comfortable and real and undeniably talented Elvis was during these laid-back impromptu jam sessions. “That when I really got the idea: Wouldn’t it be great if I had a camera in here and they didn’t know I was here?” Binder said.

Elvis was apprehensive about performing live; it had been seven years since his last concert. Binder, however, reassured him it would go well. He even arranged for Elvis’ original backing band to take part, including Scotty Moore and D.J. Fontana (bassist Bill Black had died three years earlier.) Also included were Elvis’ good friends Alan Fortas, Lance LeGault and Charlie Hodge. Two days of rehearsals for this new live and intimate performance started on June 24 in the informal and comfortable dressing room at NBC.

On this day in 1968, Elvis took the stage to perform in front of an audience for the first time since his last concert, which was at the Bloch Arena in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on March 25, 1961. Four one-hour segments were taped, with an hour-long break built in between performances to let Elvis shower, rest and have his now iconic black-leather outfit dry cleaned. Two different audiences were used for the tapings.

On some songs Elvis played guitar while singing, and on others he just sang (he and Scotty Moore were using the same electric and acoustic guitars, so they just traded them back and forth.) In one particularly funny moment, while singing “Love Me Tender,” Elvis was singing to his wife, Priscilla, who was in the audience. He jokingly changed the lyrics from “…you have made my life complete” to “…you have made my life a wreck…er, complete.”

Only a small portion of this live performance was used in the televised special, but it proved to be an explosive television moment. It was the highest-rated television special of 1968 – and it proved to be the shot in the arm The King need to launch into Phase 3 of his remarkable career, which would include an enormously successful run in Las Vegas, record-shattering concert tours and more trips to the top of the singles charts.

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This Day in Music Spotlight: Leather-Clad Elvis Retakes His Throne

Special thanks to ThisDayinMusic.com.

As the ’60s rolled in, Elvis Presley was still The King, but there were chinks beginning to appear in his armor. His music was still topping the charts, but a lot of that music – most of it, actually – came from the soundtracks of the profitable, yet cheesy, Hollywood films he was churning out. That’s not to say that the music was lacking; some of his career-best songs came from that era, including “Can’t Help Falling in Love” (1961) and “Return to Sender” (1962). Also, three of his movie soundtrack albums climbed to #1 in the first half of the decade. By anyone’s standards, those are solid achievements.

But Elvis wasn’t just anyone.

Things were not as they used to be, and Elvis’ slide into commercial mediocrity, if not downright obscurity, seemed to happen almost as quickly as his meteoric rise to superstardom a decade earlier. It didn’t help that his core fan base was now a number of years older. They were getting married, having babies – growing up. Couple that with the overnight ascension of a certain mop-topped quartet from Liverpool, and just like that, the King of Rock and Roll was all but relegated to the “where are they now” file.

From 1964 through 1968, Elvis saw only one of his singles crack the top 10 – and that was the 1965’s “Crying in the Chapel,” which was actually recorded five years earlier. After the release of his ’62 album Pot Luck, Elvis didn’t put out another new studio album (not counting movie soundtracks) until 1967’s gospel album How Great Thou Art, which brought him his first Grammy (for Best Sacred Performance).

Elvis seemed to hit rock bottom with the release of his 1967 Clambake movie soundtrack, which resulted in record-low sales. As historians Connie Kirchberg and Marc Hendrickx noted, “Elvis was viewed as a joke by serious music lovers and a has-been to all but his most loyal fans.” Elvis’ films were moving in the wrong financial direction, too, and his manager, Colonel Tom Parker, was finding it increasingly difficult to secure his usual million-dollar per film fee.

So, Parker turned to NBC and struck a $1.25 million deal for both a movie (Change of Habit) and TV special. The initial concept for the TV special was for an extravagant show complete with multiple set and costume changes, dance sequences and huge productions built around Elvis’ biggest hits. The goal was to revitalize The King’s reputation after years of silly, insipid and formulaic films.

Four days of rehearsals and music recording took place in Hollywood, beginning on June 20. It was here where the unexpected happened. After a long rehearsal session, Elvis and the other musicians would wind down by playing old blues and rock songs. The show’s producer, Steve Binder, noticed how comfortable and real and undeniably talented Elvis was during these laid-back impromptu jam sessions. “That when I really got the idea: Wouldn’t it be great if I had a camera in here and they didn’t know I was here?” Binder said.

Elvis was apprehensive about performing live; it had been seven years since his last concert. Binder, however, reassured him it would go well. He even arranged for Elvis’ original backing band to take part, including Scotty Moore and D.J. Fontana (bassist Bill Black had died three years earlier.) Also included were Elvis’ good friends Alan Fortas, Lance LeGault and Charlie Hodge. Two days of rehearsals for this new live and intimate performance started on June 24 in the informal and comfortable dressing room at NBC.

On this day in 1968, Elvis took the stage to perform in front of an audience for the first time since his last concert, which was at the Bloch Arena in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on March 25, 1961. Four one-hour segments were taped, with an hour-long break built in between performances to let Elvis shower, rest and have his now iconic black-leather outfit dry cleaned. Two different audiences were used for the tapings.

On some songs Elvis played guitar while singing, and on others he just sang (he and Scotty Moore were using the same electric and acoustic guitars, so they just traded them back and forth.) In one particularly funny moment, while singing “Love Me Tender,” Elvis was singing to his wife, Priscilla, who was in the audience. He jokingly changed the lyrics from “…you have made my life complete” to “…you have made my life a wreck…er, complete.”

Only a small portion of this live performance was used in the televised special, but it proved to be an explosive television moment. It was the highest-rated television special of 1968 – and it proved to be the shot in the arm The King need to launch into Phase 3 of his remarkable career, which would include an enormously successful run in Las Vegas, record-shattering concert tours and more trips to the top of the singles charts.

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Dave Ellefson: ‘It was a Good Time to Come Back to Megadeth’

When Megadeth broke up in 2002, it marked the end of an era. Founded in 1983 by bassist Dave Ellefson and frontman Dave Mustaine, after the latter’s expulsion from Metallica, the group pioneered the thrash metal genre. Mustaine would later restart Megadeth, but without his old partner, Ellefson—until last year, when the 46-year-old bassist rejoined the band to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Rust in Peace album. Subsequently, the group joined the wildly successful Big Four tour and things have never looked brighter for the heavy metal heroes.

Ellefson recently talked with Lithium Magazine about the reunion.

“Yeah, it was a good time to come back,” the bassist said. “There were discussions we’d been having for a while on our side, and it all just lined right up for us… 2010 really was a monumental year, not just for Megadeth, but for the entire genre. For us to be able to do the Rust in Peace tour was amazing. We’d never done a themed album tour like that before, so to do one of those and be able to film that for the Rust in Peace live DVD, and, of course, then rolling right into the Big Four shows and live DVD with that, as well. It was really just a real true homecoming on all fronts for all of us.”

For the reunion to work, Ellefson said that he had to leave the past behind.

“I think on my side of it, I mentally tried to not go back to where the baggage was,” Ellefson admitted. “I mean, you can’t change anything from the past. All you can do is hopefully learn from it and you move forward. I think that to not have learned from your past is probably the worst mistake you could ever make in your life, because none of us are perfect. And certainly in rock and roll bands, you are all very close to each other because of the creative aspect of making music. Then there is the business side of it. The time you spend in the yellow submarine and the iron lung—the airplanes and tour buses and backstages—it’s those close confines where you seem to sacrifice a little bit of your personal space for the betterment of the group.

“And I think that one of the things that was nice in my time away from Megadeth was getting to develop other sides of my life. When I came back, I felt like I’d got to spread my wings a bit, and then come back to the band willing to make some personal sacrifices again. In a group setting, the individual thrives only if the group thrives. Getting that team mentality going again has been something that I have, quite honestly, really enjoyed over the past year.”

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Dave Ellefson: ‘It was a Good Time to Come Back to Megadeth’

When Megadeth broke up in 2002, it marked the end of an era. Founded in 1983 by bassist Dave Ellefson and frontman Dave Mustaine, after the latter’s expulsion from Metallica, the group pioneered the thrash metal genre. Mustaine would later restart Megadeth, but without his old partner, Ellefson—until last year, when the 46-year-old bassist rejoined the band to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Rust in Peace album. Subsequently, the group joined the wildly successful Big Four tour and things have never looked brighter for the heavy metal heroes.

Ellefson recently talked with Lithium Magazine about the reunion.

“Yeah, it was a good time to come back,” the bassist said. “There were discussions we’d been having for a while on our side, and it all just lined right up for us… 2010 really was a monumental year, not just for Megadeth, but for the entire genre. For us to be able to do the Rust in Peace tour was amazing. We’d never done a themed album tour like that before, so to do one of those and be able to film that for the Rust in Peace live DVD, and, of course, then rolling right into the Big Four shows and live DVD with that, as well. It was really just a real true homecoming on all fronts for all of us.”

For the reunion to work, Ellefson said that he had to leave the past behind.

“I think on my side of it, I mentally tried to not go back to where the baggage was,” Ellefson admitted. “I mean, you can’t change anything from the past. All you can do is hopefully learn from it and you move forward. I think that to not have learned from your past is probably the worst mistake you could ever make in your life, because none of us are perfect. And certainly in rock and roll bands, you are all very close to each other because of the creative aspect of making music. Then there is the business side of it. The time you spend in the yellow submarine and the iron lung—the airplanes and tour buses and backstages—it’s those close confines where you seem to sacrifice a little bit of your personal space for the betterment of the group.

“And I think that one of the things that was nice in my time away from Megadeth was getting to develop other sides of my life. When I came back, I felt like I’d got to spread my wings a bit, and then come back to the band willing to make some personal sacrifices again. In a group setting, the individual thrives only if the group thrives. Getting that team mentality going again has been something that I have, quite honestly, really enjoyed over the past year.”

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