Posté : 27 juin 2011, 12:18
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Excellent! J'avais lu une histoire de batterie à l'envers dans "The Dirt" mais je pensais pas à un truc aussi spectaculaire!Le forum francophone dédié au Metal TRADITIONNEL! Ou pas.
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Dernier message de la page précédente :
Excellent! J'avais lu une histoire de batterie à l'envers dans "The Dirt" mais je pensais pas à un truc aussi spectaculaire!Si tu as envie de voir un show frelaté avec les choeurs sur bandes et autres traficotages au niveau guitares ...Fonz a écrit :Je veux voir ca !!! ENORME !![]()
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Ha quand un passage par chez nous ? ... ou pas trop loin
... va plutôt voir WASP (oupsBreizhjoker a écrit :Si tu as envie de voir un show frelaté avec les choeurs sur bandes et autres traficotages au niveau guitares ...
C'était peut être l'exception mais les 2 étaient au Hellfest il y a 3 ans. Autant W.A.S.P. a fait une super prestation et dépassé de 15 mn le temps imparti, autant Mötley Crüe était décevant : et puis ces samplesMister Double T a écrit :... va plutôt voir WASP (oupsBreizhjoker a écrit :Si tu as envie de voir un show frelaté avec les choeurs sur bandes et autres traficotages au niveau guitares ...![]()
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Je confirme. C'était l'exceptionBreizhjoker a écrit : C'était peut être l'exception mais les 2 étaient au Hellfest il y a 3 ans. Autant W.A.S.P. a fait une super prestation et dépassé de 15 mn le temps imparti, autant Mötley Crüe était décevant : et puis ces samplesça tenait autant du playback que du live....
D'ailleurs les conditions étaient suspectes : écran géant coupé et pas de photographes dans la fosse ...
Dans "the dirt" ça doit parler de la batterie qui tourne sur elle même, tournée Girls, girls, girls je crois !Mister Double T a écrit :Excellent! J'avais lu une histoire de batterie à l'envers dans "The Dirt" mais je pensais pas à un truc aussi spectaculaire!
C'est à chier de toute façon.Gauxe a écrit :C'est moi ou sur la première vidéo, on entend des trips genre rap/techno pendant le "solo" de batterie?
Nan mais... ça me dérange
The Crüe makes their first trip to the U.K. and plays the huge Monsters of Rock Festival in Donington at noon in front of about sixty thousand metalheads. At the end of their set, Nikki throws his bass into the crowd and it lands on a fan named Stu Taylor, smashing his glasses and cutting his head open. A number of people take the guitar to the side of the stage to smash it up and share out the pieces.
MusicRadar.com: Recently you said that you didn't feel recording albums was worth it anymore, that making singles was the way to go.
Tommy: "That's right. I'm thinking more EPs, though – small bodies of work. You know, slaving for a year in the studio to make a whole album when the public only wants one song, it's just fucking stupid. It makes no sense on any level. That's my opinion for my solo stuff and MÖTLEY CRÜE. It doesn't mean my band will necessarily agree with me. But my attitude is, why not make a four-song EP with absolute bangers on them? I think it makes perfect sense. If you look at the charts and the statistics, it'll show you that people don't buy albums anymore, they buy singles. You don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure that out."
MusicRadar.com: Have you talked to any of the other members of the CRÜE about this?
Tommy: "I've mentioned it to Nikki [Sixx, bass]. We haven't come to any kind of decision on what to do, but he knows my feelings and where I stand on the matter. Now, for MÖTLEY, if we have something different, like the soundtrack to "The Dirt", for example, then that's an exception. If we're scoring the movie and adding songs and things, then a full album has a purpose. Other than that, just to make a record for the sake of making a record, it doesn't make sense anymore. I'd rather release four songs at a time, that'd be great. And more often, too. So much of the time bands take a year or two before they put anything out. It's like, 'Jesus Christ, guys! I thought you all broke up by now.' I'm sick of all that. Let's do two four-song EPs a year. To me, that's a winning proposition. The days of making those big, drawn-out albums are over."
MusicRadar.com: Does the band have any new material written?
Tommy: "Nikki's got some stuff kickin' around, I've got a few things kickin' around. Whether I'm writing solo stuff, electronic stuff or material for MÖTLEY, I just write to write. I come up with it and put things in different piles. I guess some of the things I have could be for MÖTLEY CRÜE."
On how his primary concern was always the music despite the fact that MÖTLEY CRÜE's lives of sex, drugs, and rock 'n' rock may have thrust them into the spotlight:
Mick: "I really do focus on music. When I was 3 years old and I decided that I was going to be a musician, a guitar player — that's the same way I think today. I don't care what kind of consequences might come or get in my way…This is what I chose to do and I'm not going to let anybody or anyone or anything mess it up for me. I just love music. That's all I want to do. . . I have to admit that some of the guys like that media attention. I don't. I'm about the music. I skip the (expletive)."
On how he thought at least one member of the band "would be dead by now":
Mick: "I think I would say that we're probably a bit more educated after a couple of overdoses. You know what I mean? It's like, 'Oh, I don't want to do that again.' I think everybody goes through that, really."
On how MÖTLEY CRÜE has gained respect and its own place in the music industry:
Mick: "Our fans grew up and took over… It's pretty funny, you have to admit. I think that any new band that comes out gets rejected unless you're very, very poppy and commercial. Anything new and different or whatever you want to call it has to get respect. You have to earn it, I guess, paying your dues,” he explained.
"Notice every time a new band comes out it's 'the devil's music.' Imagine if there was no change and we were still playing 'Hound Dog' by BIG MAMA THORNTON or Elvis. I guess that people are accustomed to gradual change, but radical change? No."
On his battle with ankylosing spondylitis, a chronic form of arthritis that causes inflammation of his spine and pelvis:
Mick: "It still hurts. It still grinds now and then, but like I said, music is my whole passion. It's what I do. It's what I live for. I guess it keeps me alive.
"I'm just happy to be here, to be able to make people happy, to make people smile and give them what I feel inside from my music… I hope you like this, and if you don't, oh well."
On his musical aspirations:
Mick: "I think MÖTLEY was a giant stepping stone for me. I'm far from being over. I am going to do a solo album, but I am also going to make sure that it's the right people that I want to play with. A lot of people will look at this record that I want to do and go, 'I didn't know Mick could do that.' If it doesn't come off that way, I won't do it."
On MÖTLEY CRÜE's current tour:
Mick: "This is probably one of the biggest and best shows we've done since quite a long time. Even with 'Red, White, & Crüe' and 'Carnival of Sins', this is even better than that."
Everflow a écrit :Mick Mars en une phrase : "la musique me maintient en vie".
Ça tombe bien...Tommy Lee a écrit :But my attitude is, why not make a four-song EP with absolute bangers on them? I think it makes perfect sense. If you look at the charts and the statistics, it'll show you that people don't buy albums anymore, they buy singles. You don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure that out."